Coupled evolutions of the stellar obliquity, orbital distance, and
planet's radius due to the Ohmic dissipation induced in a diamagnetic hot
Jupiter around a magnetic T Tauri star
We revisit the calculation of the Ohmic dissipation in a hot Jupiter
presented in Laine et al. (2008) by considering more realistic interior
structures, stellar obliquity, and the resulting orbital evolution. In this
simplified approach, the young hot Jupiter of one Jupiter mass is modelled as a
diamagnetic sphere with a finite resistivity, orbiting across tilted stellar
magnetic dipole fields in vacuum. Since the induced Ohmic dissipation occurs
mostly near the planet's surface, we find that the dissipation is unable to
significantly expand the young hot Jupiter. Nevertheless, the planet inside a
small co-rotation orbital radius can undergo orbital decay by the dissipation
torque and finally overfill its Roche lobe during the T Tauri star phase. The
stellar obliquity can evolve significantly if the magnetic dipole is
parallel/anti-parallel to the stellar spin. Our results are validated by the
general torque-dissipation relation in the presence of the stellar obliquity.
We also run the fiducial model in Laine et al. (2008) and find that the
planet's radius is sustained at a nearly constant value by the Ohmic heating,
rather than being thermally expanded to the Roche radius as suggested by the
authors.Comment: about 40 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa