Discoveries of extrasolar planets in the habitable zone (HZ) of their parent
star lead to questions about the habitability of massive moons orbiting planets
in the HZ. Around low-mass stars, the HZ is much closer to the star than for
Sun-like stars. For a planet-moon binary in such a HZ, the proximity of the
star forces a close orbit for the moon to remain gravitationally bound to the
planet. Under these conditions the effects of tidal heating, distortion
torques, and stellar perturbations become important considerations for exomoon
habitability.
Utilizing a model that considers both dynamical and tidal interactions
simultaneously, we performed a computational investigation into exomoon
evolution for systems in the HZ of low-mass stars (≲0.6M⊙).
We show that dwarf stars with masses ≲0.2M⊙ cannot host
habitable exomoons within the stellar HZ due to extreme tidal heating in the
moon. Perturbations from a central star may continue to have deleterious
effects in the HZ up to ≈0.5M⊙, depending on the host
planet's mass and its location in the HZ, amongst others. In addition to
heating concerns, torques due to tidal and spin distortion can lead to the
relatively rapid inward spiraling of a moon. Therefore, moons of giant planets
in HZs around the most abundant type of star are unlikely to have habitable
surfaces. In cases with lower intensity tidal heating the stellar perturbations
may have a positive influence on exomoon habitability by promoting long-term
heating and possibly extending the HZ for exomoons.Comment: accepted by MNRAS, 20 pages, 8 figures in main text (7 col, 1 b/w