Structure and evolution of a tidally heated star
Diana Estrella-Trujillo, S. Jane Arthur, Gloria Koenigsberger, Edmundo, Moreno

TL;DR
This paper investigates how tidal heating influences the structure and evolution of stars in binary systems using 3D modeling and stellar evolution simulations, revealing significant effects on stellar size, luminosity, and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a method combining 3D tidal flow simulations with stellar evolution models to quantify tidal heating effects on stars in binary systems.
Findings
Heated models show larger radii and higher surface luminosity.
Tidal heating reduces surface convection zones and nuclear reaction rates.
Effects depend on energy injection, star's density, and turbulent viscosity.
Abstract
The shearing motion of tidal flows that are excited in non-equilibrium binary stars transform kinetic energy into heat via a process referred to as tidal heating. In this paper we aim to explore the way tidal heating affects the stellar structure. We used the TIDES code, which solves the equations of motion of the three-dimensional (3D) grid of volume elements that conform multiple layers of a rotating binary star to obtain an instantaneous value for the angular velocity, , as a function of position in the presence of gravitational, centrifugal, Coriolis, gas pressure, and viscous forces. The released energy, was computed using a prescription for turbulent viscosity that depends on the instantaneous velocity gradients. The values for each radius were injected into a MESA stellar structure calculation. The method is illustrated for a 1.0+0.8 M…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
