Can one hear supercontinents in the tides of ocean planets?
Pierre Auclair-Desrotour, Mohammad Farhat, Gwena\"el Bou\'e, Micka\"el, Gastineau, Jacques Laskar

TL;DR
This study models how a supercontinent affects oceanic tides on ocean planets, revealing complex and irregular tidal responses influenced by landmass size and position, with implications for planetary evolution.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical framework to quantify the impact of supercontinents on tidal responses, highlighting the importance of land-ocean geometry in tidal dissipation.
Findings
Supercontinents cause irregular tidal responses and symmetry breaking.
Large continents significantly alter tidal dissipation and torque.
Small continents like South America have negligible effects.
Abstract
Recent observations and theoretical progress made about the history of the Earth-Moon system suggest that tidal dissipation in oceans primarily drives the long term evolution of orbital systems hosting ocean planets. Particularly, they emphasise the key role played by the geometry of land-ocean distributions in this mechanism. However, the complex way continents affect oceanic tides still remains to be elucidated. In the present study, we investigate the impact of a single supercontinent on the tidal response of an ocean planet and the induced tidally dissipated energy. The adopted approach is based on the linear tidal theory. By simplifying the continent to a spherical cap of given angular radius and position on the globe, we proceed to a harmonic analysis of the whole planet's tidal response including the coupling with the solid part due to ocean loading and self-attraction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
