How Stars Consume Planets: A Violent Cosmic Process

When a planet spirals too close to its star, its fate depends on the star’s size and the planet’s composition. Here’s how the destruction unfolds:

1. Tidal Disruption (For Gas Giants Like WASP-12b)

  • The star’s gravity stretches the planet into an elongated shape, creating intense internal friction.
  • Over time, the planet’s outer layers are stripped away, forming a temporary accretion disk around the star.
  • Eventually, the core is either:
    • Swallowed whole (if it survives tidal forces).
    • Ripped apart into fragments that rain onto the star.

2. Evaporation (For Smaller, Rocky Planets)

  • Extreme radiation vaporizes the planet’s surface, creating a comet-like tail of gas (observed with HD 209458b).
  • The remaining core may crash into the star or become a burnt cinder.

3. Direct Impact (Rare but Dramatic)

  • If the planet’s orbit decays rapidly, it can collide intact with the star, triggering a bright flare.
    • Example: In 2020, astronomers saw a white dwarf (ZTF J0139+5245) devouring a planet in a single event.

Could Earth Ever Suffer This Fate?

Thankfully, no—but here’s why:

1. Our Orbit Is Stable

  • The Sun’s tidal forces on Earth are too weak to cause orbital decay.
  • Earth’s distance (1 AU) is far enough that drag from the solar wind is negligible.

2. The Sun’s Future Expansion

  • In ~5 billion years, the Sun will become a red giant, swelling to engulf Mercury, Venus, and possibly Earth.
  • However, this is stellar evolution, not orbital decay.

3. Human-Scale Threats

  • Gravitational perturbations (e.g., a rogue star passing by) could destabilize Earth’s orbit, but the odds are astronomically low.
  • Artificial scenarios (like a black hole flyby) are sci-fi for now.

What’s Next in Doomed Planet Research?

  1. JWST’s Upcoming Targets:
    • KELT-9b (hottest known exoplanet, ~4,300°C) – Is its orbit decaying even faster?
    • TOI-2109b (another ultra-hot Jupiter spiraling inward).
  2. Detecting “Death Screams”
    • When planets are torn apart, they may emit X-ray or UV flares (like ASASSN-14li, where a star was shredded by a black hole).
  3. Simulating Planetary Demise
    • Advanced models (like SPH simulations) predict how gas giants stretch and burst before falling into stars.

Final Thought

WASP-12b’s death plunge is a preview of a violent process happening across the universe. While Earth is safe, studying these events helps us understand:

  • How planetary systems evolve.
  • Why hot Jupiters are rare in older star systems (many may have already fallen into their stars).

Cosmic Countdown: When Will These Doomed Exoplanets Meet Their End?

Here’s a timeline comparing the expected fates of known “doomed” exoplanets, from imminent destruction to slow decay:

ExoplanetTypeCurrent OrbitOrbital Decay RateEstimated Time LeftDestruction Method
WASP-12bUltra-hot Jupiter1.09 days~30 ms/year~3 million yearsTidal disruption → consumed by star
Kepler-1658bHot Jupiter3.85 days~130 ms/year~2.5 million yearsSpiral-in collision
KELT-16bUltra-hot Jupiter0.97 days~35 ms/year~1 million yearsComplete tidal shredding
TOI-2109bHot Jupiter0.67 days~260 ms/year~700,000 yearsFastest decaying planet known
HD 209458b (Osiris)Hot Jupiter3.5 daysMinimal decay>100 million yearsSlow evaporation → bare core

White Dwarfs: The Exoplanet Cannibals

When stars like the Sun die, they become white dwarfs—Earth-sized stellar corpses with immense gravity. About 25-50% of white dwarfs show signs of having eaten their own planets.

How It Happens:

  1. Star Expands into a Red Giant (engulfs inner planets).
  2. Sheds Outer Layers, leaving a dense white dwarf.
  3. Remaining Planets’ Orbits Destabilize due to mass loss.
  4. Tidal Forces Tear Them Apart, creating:
    • debris disk (observed as metal pollution in the star’s spectrum).
    • Infrared excess from dust (e.g., WD 1145+017, which has a disintegrating planetesimal).

Real Examples of Planet Death by White Dwarf:

  • WD 1145+017: A rocky body is being vaporized in real-time, leaving a comet-like dust tail.
  • G238-44: A white dwarf caught “eating” an asteroid belt and icy bodies simultaneously.
  • ZTF J0139+5245: A full planetary collision observed in 2020, causing a bright flare.

Could a Surviving Planet Orbit a White Dwarf?

Yes! A few intact planets have been found orbiting white dwarfs, including:

  • WD 1856+534 b: A Jupiter-sized planet that migrated inward post-red giant phase.
  • MOA-2010-BLG-477L b: A planet that survived its star’s death at Earth-like distances.

These discoveries suggest some worlds endure—but their atmospheres are likely scorched relics.


What’s Next in Planetary Destruction Research?

  1. JWST’s White Dwarf Observations: Hunting for oxygen in debris disks (a sign of shredded Earth-like worlds).
  2. LSST (Vera Rubin Observatory): Expected to catch dozens of planets being engulfed by stars or white dwarfs.
  3. LISA (2030s): A gravitational-wave detector that could sense planets spiraling into white dwarfs.

Final Answer: The Universe Is a Violent Place

  • Hot Jupiters like WASP-12b are doomed to fall into their stars.
  • Smaller planets may be vaporized or frozen remnants after stellar death.
  • Earth’s fate is sealed in ~5 billion years (red giant expansion), but not by orbital decay.

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