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Orbits of close-in planets can shrink significantly due to dissipation of tidal energy in a host star. This process can result in star-planet coalescence within the Galactic lifetime. In some cases, such events can be accompanied by an optical or/and UV/X-ray transient. Potentially, these outbursts can be observed in near future with new facilities such as LSST from distances about few Mpc. We use a population synthesis model to study this process and derive the rate of star-planet mergers of different types. Mostly, planets are absorbed by red giants. However, these events, happening with the rate about 3 per year, mostly do not produce detectable transients. The rate of mergers with main sequence stars depends on the effectiveness of tidal dissipation; for reasonable values of stellar tidal quality factor, such events happen in a Milky Way-like galaxy approximately once in 70 yrs or more rarely. This rate is dominated by planets with low masses. Such events do not produce bright transients having maximum luminosities $lesssim 10^{36.5}$erg s$^{-1}$. Brighter events, related to massive planets, with maximum luminosity $sim 10^{37.5}$--$10^{38}$erg s$^{-1}$, have the rate nearly five times smaller.
We consider the evolution of a binary system interacting due to tidal effects without restriction on the orientation of the orbital, and where significant, spin angular momenta, and orbital eccentricity. We work in the low tidal forcing frequency reg
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The multiple-planet systems discovered by the Kepler mission show an excess of planet pairs with period ratios just wide of exact commensurability for first-order resonances like 2:1 and 3:2. In principle, these planet pairs could have both resonance
We explore the impact of outer stellar companions on the occurrence rate of giant planets detected with radial velocities. We searched for stellar and planetary companions to a volume-limited sample of solar-type stars within 25 pc. Using adaptive op