Abstract
The recognition that planets may survive the late stages of stellar evolution, and the prospects for finding them around White Dwarfs, are growing. We discuss two aspects governing planetary survival through stellar evolution to the White Dwarf stage. First we discuss the case of a single planet, and its survival under the effects of stellar mass loss, radius expansion, and tidal orbital decay as the star evolves along the Asymptotic Giant Branch. We show that, for stars initially of 1 − 5 M ⊙ , any planets within about 1 − 5 AU will be engulfed, this distance depending on the stellar and planet masses and the planet's eccentricity. Planets engulfed by the star's envelope are unlikely to survive. Hence, planets surviving the Asymptotic Giant Branch phase will probably be found beyond ∼ 2 AU for a 1 M ⊙ progenitor and ∼ 10 AU for a 5 M ⊙ progenitor. We then discuss the evolution of two-planet systems around evolving stars. As stars lose mass, planet–planet interactions become stronger, and many systems stable on the Main Sequence become destabilised following evolution of the primary. The outcome of such instabilities is typically the ejection of one planet, with the survivor being left on an eccentric orbit. These eccentric planets could in turn be responsible for feeding planetesimals into the neighbourhood of White Dwarfs, causing observed pollution and circumstellar discs.
Highlights
Much interest is focussing on planetary systems around evolved stars
First we discuss the case of a single planet, and its survival under the effects of stellar mass loss, radius expansion, and tidal orbital decay as the star evolves along the Asymptotic Giant Branch
EPJ Web of Conferences the stellar mass increases the planet:star mass ratios, significantly altering systems’ dynamics and potentially triggering instability [2, 3]. In this contribution we summarise our recent work on the survival of planets around Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars, including the effects of stellar mass loss, radius changes and tidal forces [13]
Summary
Much interest is focussing on planetary systems around evolved stars. Radial-velocity surveys have discovered several dozen planets orbiting giant stars [see 10, for a recent compilation]. Claims have been made of detections of planets around evolved binaries [e.g., 14], such claims often do not survive detailed scrutiny [e.g., 21]. The stellar mass increases the planet:star mass ratios, significantly altering systems’ dynamics and potentially triggering instability [2, 3] In this contribution we summarise our recent work on the survival of planets around AGB stars, including the effects of stellar mass loss, radius changes and tidal forces [13]. We summarise our work on the dynamics of two-planet systems around evolving stars [18]
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