Hydrodynamics and Survivability during Post-main-sequence Planetary Engulfment
Abstract
The engulfment of substellar bodies (SBs), such as brown dwarfs and planets, by giant stars is a possible explanation for rapidly rotating giants, lithium-rich giants, and the presence of SBs in close orbits around subdwarfs and white dwarfs. We perform three-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of the flow in the vicinity of an engulfed SB. We model the SB as a rigid body with a reflective surface because it cannot accrete. This reflective boundary changes the flow morphology to resemble that of engulfed compact objects with outflows. We measure the drag coefficients for the ram-pressure and gravitational drag forces acting on the SB, and use them to integrate its trajectory inside the star. We find that engulfment can increase the luminosity of a 1 M ⊙ star by up to a few orders of magnitude. The time for the star to return to its original luminosity is up to a few thousand years when the star has evolved to ≈10 R ⊙ and up to a few decades at the tip of the red giant branch (RGB). No SBs can eject the envelope of a 1 M ⊙ star before it evolves to ≈10 R ⊙ if the orbit of the SB is the only energy source contributing to the ejection. In contrast, SBs as small as ≈10 M Jup can eject the envelope at the tip of the RGB. The numerical framework we introduce here can be used to study planetary engulfment in a simplified setting that captures the physics of the flow at the scale of the SB.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- September 2023
- DOI:
- 10.3847/1538-4357/acbdfc
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2203.11227
- Bibcode:
- 2023ApJ...954..176Y
- Keywords:
-
- Star-planet interactions;
- Hydrodynamical simulations;
- Exoplanet dynamics;
- Exoplanet evolution;
- Exoplanets;
- Evolved stars;
- Stellar evolution;
- Brown dwarfs;
- Exoplanet systems;
- Common envelope evolution;
- Lithium stars;
- Hydrodynamics;
- 2177;
- 767;
- 490;
- 491;
- 498;
- 481;
- 1599;
- 185;
- 484;
- 2154;
- 927;
- 1963;
- Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics;
- Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 20 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Comments welcome. Reproducibility repository at DOI 10.5281/zenodo.6368226