Is planetary inward migration responsible for GJ 504's fast rotation and bright X-ray luminosity? New constraints from eROSITA
C. Pezzotti, G. Buldgen, E. Magaudda, M. Farnir, V. Van Grootel, S., Bellotti, and K. Poppenhaeger

TL;DR
This study investigates whether inward planetary migration and subsequent engulfment can explain GJ 504's rapid rotation and high X-ray luminosity, using stellar evolution simulations and eROSITA data.
Contribution
It introduces a model comparing star evolution with and without planetary inward migration to explain GJ 504's properties, favoring the migration scenario.
Findings
Inward migration and planetary engulfment better reproduce GJ 504's rotation and X-ray luminosity.
The scenario with planetary interaction aligns more closely with observational data.
Tidal interactions likely played a significant role in GJ 504's stellar evolution.
Abstract
The discovery of an increasing variety of exoplanets in very close orbits around their host stars raised many questions about how stars and planets interact, and to which extent host stars' properties may be influenced by the presence of close-by companions. Understanding how the evolution of stars is impacted by the interactions with their planets is fundamental to disentangle their intrinsic evolution from Star-Planet Interactions (SPI)-induced phenomena. GJ 504 is a promising candidate for a star that underwent strong SPI. Its unusually short rotational period (3.4 days), while being in contrast with what is expected by single-star models, could result from the inward migration of a close-by, massive companion, pushed starward by tides. Moreover, its brighter X-ray luminosity may hint at a rejuvenation of the dynamo process sustaining the stellar magnetic field, consequent to the…
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