Orbital decay of short-period gas giants under evolving tides

Author:

Alvarado-Montes Jaime A123ORCID,García-Carmona Carolina3

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Astronomy, Astrophysics and Astrophotonics, Macquarie University – Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

2. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Macquarie University – Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

3. Solar, Earth, and Planetary Physics Group (SEAP), Instituto de Física, FCEN, Universidad de Antioquia – Calle 70 No. 52-21, Medellín, Colombia

Abstract

Abstract The discovery of many giant planets in close-in orbits and the effect of planetary and stellar tides in their subsequent orbital decay have been extensively studied in the context of planetary formation and evolution theories. Planets orbiting close to their host stars undergo close encounters, atmospheric photoevaporation, orbital evolution, and tidal interactions. In many of these theoretical studies, it is assumed that the interior properties of gas giants remain static during orbital evolution. Here, we present a model that allows for changes in the planetary radius as well as variations in the planetary and stellar dissipation parameters, caused by the planet’s contraction and change of rotational rates from the strong tidal fields. In this semi-analytical model, giant planets experience a much slower tidal-induced circularization compared to models that do not consider these instantaneous changes. We predict that the eccentricity damping time-scale increases about an order of magnitude in the most extreme case for too inflated planets, large eccentricities, and when the planet’s tidal properties are calculated according to its interior structural composition. This finding potentially has significant implications on interpreting the period–eccentricity distribution of known giant planets as it may naturally explain the large number of non-circularized, close period currently known. Additionally, this work may help to constrain some models of planetary interiors, and contribute to a better insight about how tides affect the orbital evolution of extrasolar systems.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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