Sating a Voracious Appetite: The Tidal Interaction of Close-in Planets with their Host Stars
Abstract
Transit observations of the apparent angle between the stellar spin and the vector normal to the planetary orbital plane suggest that cool stars are preferably aligned systems even as hot stars exhibit a large range of obliquities. In addition, as was demonstrated recently by Mazeh et al., the distribution of planet periods as a function of mass exhibits a dearth of sub-Jupiter--mass planets at < 4 days periods, with the boundary of the sparsely populated region in phase space having a roughly conical shape. We suggest that both of these seemingly disparate features are manifestations of the tidal interaction between close-in planets and their host stars. We attribute the dichotomy in the obliquity properties to the effect of an early population of hot Jupiters that got stranded near the inner edge of a primordially misaligned protoplanetary disk and subsequently (on a timescale < 1 Gyr) ingested by the host star. The relative magnitudes of the stellar spin and planetary orbital angular momenta at the time of ingestion determined whether the hot Jupiter could realign the host; this did not happen in the case of hot stars because of inefficient magnetic braking and a comparatively high moment of inertia. We interpret the dearth of intermediate-mass planets at short periods by considering the tidal evolution of planets that arrive on highly eccentric orbits at later (> 1 Gyr) times and become circularized at radii of a few times the Roche limit.
- Publication:
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AAS/Division for Extreme Solar Systems Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2015
- Bibcode:
- 2015ESS.....310810M