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The impact of classical and General Relativistic obliquity precessions on the habitability of circumstellar neutron stars' planets

Authors :
Lorenzo Iorio
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Recently, it has been shown that rocky planets orbiting neutron stars can be habitable under non unrealistic circumstances. If a distant, pointlike source of visible light such as a Sun-like main sequence star or the gravitationally lensed accretion disk of a supermassive black hole is present as well, possible temporal variations $\Delta\varepsilon_\mathrm{p}(t)$ of the planet's axial tilt $\varepsilon_\mathrm{p}$ to the ecliptic plane should be included in the overall habitability budget since the obliquity determines the insolation at a given latitude on a body' s surface. I point out that, for rather generic initial spin-orbit initial configurations, general relativistic and classical spin variations induced by the post-Newtonian de Sitter and Lense-Thirring components of the field of the host neutron star and by its pull to the planetary oblateness $J_2^\mathrm{p}$ may induce huge and very fast variations of $\varepsilon_\mathrm{p}$ which would likely have an impact on the habitability of such worlds. In particular, for a planet's distance of, say, $0.005\,\mathrm{au}$ from a $1.4\,M_\odot$ neutron star corresponding to an orbital period $P_\mathrm{b}=0.109\,\mathrm{d}$, obliquity shifts $\Delta\varepsilon_\mathrm{p}$ as large as $\varepsilon^\mathrm{max}_\mathrm{p}-\varepsilon_\mathrm{p}^\mathrm{min}\simeq 50^\circ-100^\circ$ over characteristic timescales as short as $10\,\mathrm{d}$ ($J_2^\mathrm{p}$) to $3\,\mathrm{Myr}$ (Lense-Thirring) may occur for arbitrary orientations of the orbital and spin angular momenta $\boldsymbol{L},\,{\boldsymbol{S}}_\mathrm{ns},\,{\boldsymbol{S}}_\mathrm{p}$ of the planet-neutron star system. In view of this feature of their spins, I dub such hypothetical planets as ``nethotrons".<br />Comment: laTex2e, 15 pages, 1 table, 4 figures. Version matching the one at press in The Astronomical Journal (AJ)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee1bdca483d90a7d15ea72fc97c32039