The Coupled Tidal Evolution of the Moons and Spins of Warm Exoplanets
Yubo Su, Melaine Saillenfest

TL;DR
This study explores how star-planet and moon-planet tidal interactions influence the long-term evolution and stability of moons around warm exoplanets, revealing potential moon loss and effects on planetary obliquity.
Contribution
It provides analytical criteria and numerical simulations to understand the coupled tidal evolution of exomoons and host planet spins, highlighting the importance of these processes for exoplanet characteristics.
Findings
Many warm exoplanets may have lost their moons due to Laplace plane instability.
Surviving moons tend to migrate inward and are eventually disrupted.
Moons significantly influence the final obliquities of warm exoplanets.
Abstract
Context: The Solar System giant planets harbour a wide variety of moons. Moons around exoplanets are plausibly similarly abundant, even though most of them are likely too small to be easily detectable with modern instruments. Moons are known to affect the long-term dynamics of the spin of their host planets; however, their influence on warm exoplanets (i.e.\ with moderately short periods of about to ~days), which undergo significant star-planet tidal dissipation, is still unclear. Aims: Here, we study the coupled dynamical evolution of exomoons and the spin dynamics of their host planets, focusing on warm exoplanets. Methods: Analytical criteria give the relevant dynamical regimes at play as a function of the system's parameters. Possible evolution tracks mostly depend on the hierarchy of timescales between the star-planet and the moon-planet tidal dissipations. We illustrate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
