Star-planet systems as possible progenitors of cataclysmic binaries

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

Scientific paper

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Binary Stars, Companion Stars, Extrasolar Planets, Novae, Stellar Evolution, Stellar Mass Accretion, Critical Mass, Red Giant Stars, Stellar Envelopes, Stellar Mass, Stellar Structure, Stellar Winds

Scientific paper

The evolution of a star-planet system is studied, in the phase in which the star becomes a red giant, thus enabling the planet to accrete mass either from its envelope or from its wind. It is found that for planets which are embedded in the envelope, there exists a certain critical initial mass, under which the planets are totally evaporated while spiralling-in. Planets with an initial mass above this critical value are all transformed into low-mass stellar companions to the giant's core. The final masses of these secondaries are almost independent of their initial mass and their initial separation, as long as the latter is greater than a certain critical value. The final masses are essentially determined by the giant's envelope mass. The star-planet separation is found to increase for planets that accrete from the stellar wind, when tidal effects are neglected. Possible consequences of these results on the problem of formation of low-mass cataclysmic binaries are discussed.

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