Tidal Dissipation in Extrasolar Planets

Many known extra-solar giant planets lie close to their host stars. Around 60 have their semi-major axes smaller than 0.05 AU. In contrast to planets further out, the vast majority of these close-in planets have low eccentricity orbits. This suggests that their orbits have been circularized likely d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pena, Fernando Gabriel
Other Authors: Wu, Yanqin
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/24849
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-24849
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-248492013-04-17T04:18:17ZTidal Dissipation in Extrasolar PlanetsPena, Fernando Gabrieltidal dissipationinertial modesclose binarieshot JupitersRings of Saturnpseudospectral methodChebyshev expansionastrophysicsdynamical tideasteroseismology0606Many known extra-solar giant planets lie close to their host stars. Around 60 have their semi-major axes smaller than 0.05 AU. In contrast to planets further out, the vast majority of these close-in planets have low eccentricity orbits. This suggests that their orbits have been circularized likely due to tidal dissipation inside the planets. These exoplanets share with our own Jupiter at least one trait in common: when they are subject to periodic tidal forcing, they behave like a lossy spring, with a tidal ``quality factor'', Q, of order 10^5. This parameter is the ratio between the energy in the tide and the energy dissipated per period. To explain this, a possible solution is resonantly forced internal oscillation. If the frequency of the tidal forcing happens to land on that of an internal eigenmode, this mode can be resonantly excited to a very large amplitude. The damping of such a mode inside the planet may explain the observed Q value. The only normal modes that fall in the frequency range of the tidal forcing (~ few days) are inertial modes, modes restored by the Coriolis force. We present a new numerical technique to solve for inertial modes in a convective, rotating sphere. This technique combines the use of an ellipsoidal coordinate system with a pseudo-spectral method to solve the partial differential equation that governs the inertial oscillations. We show that, this technique produces highly accurate solutions when the density profile is smooth. In particular, the lines of nodes are roughly parallel to the ellipsoidal coordinate axes. In particular, using these accurate solutions, we estimate the resultant tidal dissipation for giant planets, and find that turbulent dissipation of inertial modes in planets with smooth density profiles do not give rise to dissipation as strong as the one observed. We also study inertial modes in density profiles that exhibit discontinuities, as some recent models of Jupiter show. We found that, in this case, our method could not produce convergent solutions for the inertial modes. Additionally, we propose a way to observe inertial modes inside Saturn indirectly, by observing waves in its rings that may be excited by inertial modes inside Saturn.Wu, Yanqin2010-062010-09-01T15:33:11ZNO_RESTRICTION2010-09-01T15:33:11Z2010-09-01T15:33:11ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/24849en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic tidal dissipation
inertial modes
close binaries
hot Jupiters
Rings of Saturn
pseudospectral method
Chebyshev expansion
astrophysics
dynamical tide
asteroseismology
0606
spellingShingle tidal dissipation
inertial modes
close binaries
hot Jupiters
Rings of Saturn
pseudospectral method
Chebyshev expansion
astrophysics
dynamical tide
asteroseismology
0606
Pena, Fernando Gabriel
Tidal Dissipation in Extrasolar Planets
description Many known extra-solar giant planets lie close to their host stars. Around 60 have their semi-major axes smaller than 0.05 AU. In contrast to planets further out, the vast majority of these close-in planets have low eccentricity orbits. This suggests that their orbits have been circularized likely due to tidal dissipation inside the planets. These exoplanets share with our own Jupiter at least one trait in common: when they are subject to periodic tidal forcing, they behave like a lossy spring, with a tidal ``quality factor'', Q, of order 10^5. This parameter is the ratio between the energy in the tide and the energy dissipated per period. To explain this, a possible solution is resonantly forced internal oscillation. If the frequency of the tidal forcing happens to land on that of an internal eigenmode, this mode can be resonantly excited to a very large amplitude. The damping of such a mode inside the planet may explain the observed Q value. The only normal modes that fall in the frequency range of the tidal forcing (~ few days) are inertial modes, modes restored by the Coriolis force. We present a new numerical technique to solve for inertial modes in a convective, rotating sphere. This technique combines the use of an ellipsoidal coordinate system with a pseudo-spectral method to solve the partial differential equation that governs the inertial oscillations. We show that, this technique produces highly accurate solutions when the density profile is smooth. In particular, the lines of nodes are roughly parallel to the ellipsoidal coordinate axes. In particular, using these accurate solutions, we estimate the resultant tidal dissipation for giant planets, and find that turbulent dissipation of inertial modes in planets with smooth density profiles do not give rise to dissipation as strong as the one observed. We also study inertial modes in density profiles that exhibit discontinuities, as some recent models of Jupiter show. We found that, in this case, our method could not produce convergent solutions for the inertial modes. Additionally, we propose a way to observe inertial modes inside Saturn indirectly, by observing waves in its rings that may be excited by inertial modes inside Saturn.
author2 Wu, Yanqin
author_facet Wu, Yanqin
Pena, Fernando Gabriel
author Pena, Fernando Gabriel
author_sort Pena, Fernando Gabriel
title Tidal Dissipation in Extrasolar Planets
title_short Tidal Dissipation in Extrasolar Planets
title_full Tidal Dissipation in Extrasolar Planets
title_fullStr Tidal Dissipation in Extrasolar Planets
title_full_unstemmed Tidal Dissipation in Extrasolar Planets
title_sort tidal dissipation in extrasolar planets
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/24849
work_keys_str_mv AT penafernandogabriel tidaldissipationinextrasolarplanets
_version_ 1716580398774878208