An internal heating mechanism operating in ultra-short-period planets orbiting magnetically active stars
A. F. Lanza (INAF-Catania, Italy)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new internal heating mechanism for ultra-short-period planets caused by stellar magnetic flux tube-induced quadrupoles, leading to spin-orbit resonances and intense, short-lived planetary heating that impacts their structure and atmospheres.
Contribution
It introduces a novel heating mechanism driven by stellar magnetic quadrupoles and models its effects on specific ultra-short-period planets, highlighting its potential to cause complete planetary melting.
Findings
Maximum power dissipation inside planets ranges from 10^18 to 10^19 W.
Total energy dissipated is about 10^30 to 10^32 Joules.
Heating can cause complete melting and affect planetary magnetic dynamos.
Abstract
A new mechanism for the internal heating of ultra-short-period planets is proposed based on the gravitational perturbation by a non-axisymmetric quadrupole moment of their host stars. Such a quadrupole is due to the magnetic flux tubes in the stellar convection zone, unevenly distributed in longitude and persisting for many stellar rotations as observed in young late-type stars. The rotation period of the host star evolves from its shortest value on the zero-age main sequence to longer periods due to the loss of angular momentum through a magnetized wind. If the stellar rotation period comes close to twice the orbital period of the planet, the quadrupole leads to a spin-orbit resonance that excites oscillations of the star-planet separation. As a consequence, a strong tidal dissipation is produced inside the planet. We illustrate the operation of the mechanism by modeling the evolution…
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