pith. sign in

arxiv: 2604.03792 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-04 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR · astro-ph.EP

Interaction between Winds from Weak-lined T Tauri Stars with Exoplanetary Magnetospheres

Pith reviewed 2026-05-13 17:03 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR astro-ph.EP
keywords T Tauri starsstellar windsexoplanet magnetosphereshabitable zonesmagnetospheric standoff distanceAlfven wave damping
0
0 comments X

The pith

Strong winds from weak-lined T Tauri stars compress Earth-like planetary magnetospheres to sizes much smaller than Earth's.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper models stellar winds from 46 weak-lined T Tauri stars with both nonmagnetized and magnetized prescriptions that include constant and resonant Alfven wave damping. It then solves for the standoff distance where wind dynamic plus magnetic pressure balances the pressure of an Earth-like planetary dipole field for planets at habitable-zone distances. The calculations show that the intense winds produce magnetospheres that are systematically smaller than the present-day Earth's, with standoff distances growing as stellar age increases and wind activity declines.

Core claim

Using pressure balance calculations between stellar wind dynamic and magnetic pressures and the planetary magnetic field, the analysis of 46 weak-lined T Tauri stars shows that their intense winds compress planetary magnetospheres to standoff distances significantly smaller than Earth's current value, with the size increasing as the stars age and their winds weaken.

What carries the argument

Pressure balance at the magnetospheric standoff distance between the stellar wind's dynamic and magnetic pressures and the planetary dipole magnetic pressure.

If this is right

  • Planetary magnetospheres around these stars are compressed relative to Earth's.
  • Magnetospheric size increases with stellar age as wind activity decays.
  • The effect is obtained consistently across nonmagnetized and magnetized wind models.
  • Similar compression was previously reported for solar-type stars.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Planets around young WTTSs may need stronger magnetic moments than Earth's to achieve comparable magnetospheric shielding.
  • Atmospheric erosion rates could be elevated for habitable-zone planets during the WTTS phase due to reduced magnetospheric protection.
  • Early solar-system models might incorporate analogous compression during the Sun's own T Tauri stage.

Load-bearing premise

The stellar wind models accurately represent the actual wind properties of the 46 WTTSs, and the planets possess Earth-like magnetic moments and are located at habitable zone distances.

What would settle it

A direct measurement showing a planetary magnetosphere around a weak-lined T Tauri star with standoff distance equal to or larger than Earth's would falsify the systematic compression result.

read the original abstract

T Tauri stars, in more advanced stages of evolution, during the final accretion phase of stellar formation, exhibit intense stellar winds and surface magnetic fields with intensities around a kilogauss. With the growing interest in the search for rocky exoplanets with Earth-like dimensions, it is essential to deepen our understanding of the interaction between stellar winds and planetary magnetospheres. We investigated the interaction between stellar winds from 46 weak-lined T Tauri stars (WTTSs) and the magnetospheric protection of Earth-like planets located within their habitable zones. We employ two distinct stellar wind models, nonmagnetized and magnetized with both constant and resonant Alfven wave damping, to evaluate the pressure balance between the stellar wind and the planetary magnetic field. Our results show that the strong wind dynamic and magnetic pressures characteristic of WTTSs lead to systematically compressed planetary magnetospheres, significantly smaller than that of the present-day Earth. The analysis further indicates that planetary magnetospheric sizes increase with stellar age, following the decay of stellar magnetic activity, in agreement with previous findings for solar-type stars.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript calculates the pressure balance between winds from 46 weak-lined T Tauri stars (WTTSs) and the magnetospheres of Earth-like planets placed at habitable-zone distances. Employing non-magnetized and magnetized stellar-wind models (constant and resonant Alfvén-wave damping), the authors conclude that the combined dynamic and magnetic pressures produce systematically compressed magnetospheres whose standoff distances are significantly smaller than Earth’s present-day value, with magnetospheric size increasing with stellar age as activity decays.

Significance. If the adopted wind parameters and planetary assumptions hold, the results quantify a potentially important barrier to atmospheric retention and habitability for rocky planets around young solar-type stars, extending earlier solar-wind studies to the WTTS regime.

major comments (3)
  1. [Methods] Methods section: no description is given of how the 46 WTTSs were selected from the literature, nor are the adopted values of B_*, Ṁ, and v_∞ (or their uncertainties) tabulated or justified against observational constraints.
  2. [Results] Results and § on pressure balance: the standoff-distance calculations are presented without error bars, sensitivity tests on the free Alfvén-wave damping parameters, or propagation of uncertainties in stellar mass-loss rate and terminal velocity; this leaves the quantitative claim of “significantly smaller than Earth” unquantified.
  3. [Discussion] Discussion of age trend: the reported increase in magnetospheric size with stellar age follows directly from the built-in age–activity scaling used to set Ṁ and B_*; the manuscript does not demonstrate that the trend survives when these scalings are varied within observational bounds.
minor comments (2)
  1. Notation for the three wind models (non-magnetized, constant-damping, resonant-damping) should be defined once in the text and used consistently in all figures and tables.
  2. [Abstract] The abstract states “two distinct stellar wind models” yet three variants are described; this inconsistency should be corrected.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the constructive comments, which have identified important areas for improving the transparency and robustness of our analysis. We address each major comment below and will incorporate the suggested changes in the revised manuscript.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Methods] Methods section: no description is given of how the 46 WTTSs were selected from the literature, nor are the adopted values of B_*, Ṁ, and v_∞ (or their uncertainties) tabulated or justified against observational constraints.

    Authors: We agree that additional detail is needed. The 46 WTTSs were compiled from published catalogs of weak-lined T Tauri stars with measured rotation periods, X-ray luminosities, and magnetic field strengths (primarily from surveys such as those in the Taurus-Auriga region). In the revised manuscript we will add an explicit subsection describing the selection criteria and will include a table with the adopted B_*, Ṁ, and v_∞ values for each star, their uncertainties, and the observational references used to constrain them. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Results] Results and § on pressure balance: the standoff-distance calculations are presented without error bars, sensitivity tests on the free Alfvén-wave damping parameters, or propagation of uncertainties in stellar mass-loss rate and terminal velocity; this leaves the quantitative claim of “significantly smaller than Earth” unquantified.

    Authors: We acknowledge the lack of quantitative uncertainty assessment. In the revision we will propagate the reported uncertainties in Ṁ and v_∞ through the pressure-balance equation to produce error bars on the standoff distances. We will also add sensitivity tests varying the constant and resonant Alfvén-wave damping parameters over their plausible ranges and will report the resulting spread in magnetospheric sizes. These additions will allow a clearer quantification of how much smaller the magnetospheres are relative to Earth’s present-day value. revision: yes

  3. Referee: [Discussion] Discussion of age trend: the reported increase in magnetospheric size with stellar age follows directly from the built-in age–activity scaling used to set Ṁ and B_*; the manuscript does not demonstrate that the trend survives when these scalings are varied within observational bounds.

    Authors: The referee correctly notes that the age trend is driven by the adopted age–activity relations. These relations are taken from well-established observational scalings in the literature. In the revised manuscript we will add a short robustness check (either in the main text or an appendix) in which we vary the exponents and normalizations of the Ṁ and B_* scalings within their published observational uncertainties and show that the qualitative increase in standoff distance with age remains. We view this as a partial revision because the underlying physical expectation of decaying activity with age is robust, but we agree that explicit sensitivity tests strengthen the presentation. revision: partial

Circularity Check

1 steps flagged

Minor circularity: age trend follows directly from built-in stellar activity decay in wind models

specific steps
  1. fitted input called prediction [Abstract]
    "The analysis further indicates that planetary magnetospheric sizes increase with stellar age, following the decay of stellar magnetic activity, in agreement with previous findings for solar-type stars."

    The age dependence is not derived from new physics but is the direct output of propagating the stellar wind models' built-in decay of magnetic activity (and thus wind pressure) with age through the pressure-balance equation; the reported trend is therefore the input relation re-expressed as a result.

full rationale

The paper computes magnetospheric standoff distances via standard ram + magnetic pressure balance using three stellar wind models (non-magnetized, constant-damping, resonant-damping) applied to 46 WTTS parameters. No self-definitional equations, no fitted parameters renamed as predictions, and no load-bearing self-citations are evident in the derivation. The reported increase in magnetospheric size with stellar age is a direct propagation of the age-activity relation already embedded in the adopted wind models; this is a mild instance of 'fitted input called prediction' but does not render the central compression result tautological. The computation remains independent of the target claim once the input stellar parameters and model assumptions are granted.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the accuracy of the two stellar wind models and the assumption that planetary magnetic moments are Earth-like; no new entities are introduced, but the wind damping parameters are free parameters whose values are not specified in the abstract.

free parameters (1)
  • Alfven wave damping parameters
    Constant and resonant damping rates in the magnetized wind model are chosen to match expected stellar wind behavior but are not derived from first principles in the abstract.
axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Planetary magnetic moments are identical to Earth's
    The pressure balance calculation assumes Earth-like planetary fields without justification in the abstract.
  • domain assumption Stellar wind properties are correctly captured by the chosen models
    The nonmagnetized and magnetized models are taken as representative without independent validation shown.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5515 in / 1419 out tokens · 40661 ms · 2026-05-13T17:03:57.767521+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Lean theorems connected to this paper

Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

What do these tags mean?
matches
The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
supports
The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
extends
The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
uses
The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
contradicts
The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
unclear
Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

66 extracted references · 66 canonical work pages

  1. [1]

    2017, A&A, 600, A13

    Astudillo-Defru, N., Delfosse, X., Bonfils, X., et al. 2017, A&A, 600, A13

  2. [2]

    W., & Davis, L

    Belcher, J. W., & Davis, L. 1971, JGR, 76, 3534

  3. [3]

    2025, A&A, 700, A282

    Bellotti, S., Lueftinger, T., Boro Saikia, S., et al. 2025, A&A, 700, A282

  4. [4]

    J., Piispa, E., Pesonen, L

    Biggin, A. J., Piispa, E., Pesonen, L. J., et al. 2015, Natur, 526, 245

  5. [5]

    2002, A&A, 390, 1115

    Bonanno, A., Schlattl, H., & Paternò, L. 2002, A&A, 390, 1115

  6. [6]

    K., Paterson, G

    Bono, R. K., Paterson, G. A., & Biggin, A. J. 2022, GeoRL, 49, e2022GL100898

  7. [7]

    Canet, A., Varela, J., & Gómez de Castro, A. I. 2024, MNRAS, 531, 2626

  8. [8]

    2012, A&A, 548, A95

    Carroll, T., Strassmeier, K., Rice, J., & Künstler, A. 2012, A&A, 548, A95

  9. [9]

    2011, MNRAS, 417, 2592

    Cohen, O. 2011, MNRAS, 417, 2592

  10. [10]

    2014, ApJ, 790, 57

    Cohen, O., Drake, J., Glocer, A., et al. 2014, ApJ, 790, 57

  11. [11]

    R., & Saar, S

    Cranmer, S. R., & Saar, S. H. 2011, ApJ, 741, 54

  12. [12]

    2009, ARA&A, 47, 333

    Donati, J.-F., & Landstreet, J. 2009, ARA&A, 47, 333

  13. [13]

    2010, MNRAS, 409, 1347

    Donati, J.-F., Skelly, M., Bouvier, J., et al. 2010, MNRAS, 409, 1347

  14. [14]

    Bolzan, M. J. A. 2022, SoPh, 297, 143

  15. [15]

    Echer, E., Franco, A. M. S., da Costa, E., Hajra, R., & Bolzan, M. J. A. 2025, AdSpR, 75, 6500

  16. [16]

    M., & Killie, M

    Esser, R., Lie-Svendsen, Ø., Janse, Å. M., & Killie, M. A. 2005, ApJ, 629, L61

  17. [17]

    2012, A&A, 548, A85

    Flaccomio, E., Micela, G., & Sciortino, S. 2012, A&A, 548, A85

  18. [18]

    J., Dotter, A., et al

    Garraffo, C., Drake, J. J., Dotter, A., et al. 2018, ApJ, 862, 90

  19. [19]

    1993, The Multiplicity of T Tauri Stars in the Star Forming Regions Taurus-Auriga and Ophiuchus-Scorpius: A 2.2 μ m Speckle Imaging

    Ghez, A. 1993, The Multiplicity of T Tauri Stars in the Star Forming Regions Taurus-Auriga and Ophiuchus-Scorpius: A 2.2 μ m Speckle Imaging

  20. [20]

    W., Mutel, R

    Golay, W. W., Mutel, R. L., Lipman, D., & Güdel, M. 2023, MNRAS, 522, 1394

  21. [21]

    M., Ogg, J., Schmitz, M

    Gradstein, F. M., Ogg, J., Schmitz, M. D., & Ogg, G. e. 2012, The Geologic Time Scale (Elsevier)

  22. [22]

    2012, ApJ, 755, 97

    Gregory, S., Donati, J.-F., Morin, J., et al. 2012, ApJ, 755, 97

  23. [23]

    G., Adams, F

    Gregory, S. G., Adams, F. C., & Davies, C. L. 2016, MNRAS, 457, 3836 Grießmeier, J. M., Stadelmann, A., Penz, T., et al. 2004, A&A, 425, 753 Güdel, M., Briggs, K. R., Arzner, K., et al. 2007, A&A, 468, 353

  24. [24]

    E., & MacQueen, R

    Guhathakurta, M., Holzer, T. E., & MacQueen, R. 1996, ApJ, 458, 817

  25. [25]

    2018, A&A, 614, L3 Günther, H

    Gunell, H., Maggiolo, R., Nilsson, H., et al. 2018, A&A, 614, L3 Günther, H. M., Matt, S. P., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., et al. 2010, A&A, 519, A97

  26. [26]

    Hartmann, L., & MacGregor, K. B. 1980, ApJ, 242, 260

  27. [27]

    2019, MNRAS, 484, 5810

    Hill, C., Folsom, C., Donati, J., et al. 2019, MNRAS, 484, 5810

  28. [28]

    A., Folsom, C

    Hill, C. A., Folsom, C. P., Donati, J. F., et al. 2019, MNRAS, 484, 5810

  29. [29]

    Hollweg, J. V. 1987, ApJ, 312, 880

  30. [30]

    E., & Leer, E

    Holzer, T. E., & Leer, E. 1980, JGR, 85, 4665

  31. [31]

    Ionson, J. A. 1978, ApJ, 226, 650

  32. [32]

    L., Cohen, D

    Jensen, E. L., Cohen, D. H., & Gagné, M. 2009, ApJ, 703, 252

  33. [33]

    2015, A&A, 577, A27

    Johnstone, C., Güdel, M., Lüftinger, T., Toth, G., & Brott, I. 2015, A&A, 577, A27

  34. [34]

    G., Solomon, S

    Judge, P. G., Solomon, S. C., & Ayres, T. R. 2003, ApJ, 593, 534

  35. [35]

    F., Whitmire, D

    Kasting, J. F., Whitmire, D. P., & Reynolds, R. T. 1993, Icar, 101, 108

  36. [36]

    S., Timothy, A

    Krieger, A. S., Timothy, A. F., & Roelof, E. C. 1973, SoPh, 29, 505

  37. [37]

    A., Villarreal D’Angelo, C., et al

    Kubyshkina, D., Vidotto, A. A., Villarreal D’Angelo, C., et al. 2022, MNRAS, 510, 2111

  38. [38]

    Kuin, N. P. M., & Hearn, A. G. 1982, A&A, 114, 303

  39. [39]

    F., Chassefière, E., et al

    Lammer, H., Kasting, J. F., Chassefière, E., et al. 2008, SSRv, 139, 399

  40. [40]

    A., & Roberts, B

    Lee, M. A., & Roberts, B. 1986, ApJ, 301, 430

  41. [41]

    L., Worden, S., McClintock, W., & Robertson, R

    Linsky, J. L., Worden, S., McClintock, W., & Robertson, R. M. 1979, ApJS, 41, 47

  42. [42]

    E., & Hillenbrand, L

    Mamajek, E. E., & Hillenbrand, L. A. 2008, ApJ, 687, 1264

  43. [43]

    V., et al

    Marsden, S., Petit, P., Jeffers, S. V., et al. 2014, MNRAS, 444, 3517

  44. [44]

    2008, MNRAS, 390, 567

    Morin, J., Donati, J.-F., Petit, P., et al. 2008, MNRAS, 390, 567

  45. [45]

    H., & Jackson, B

    Munro, R. H., & Jackson, B. V. 1977, ApJ, 213, 874 Neuhäuser, R., Sterzik, M., Schmitt, J., Wichmann, R., & Krautter, J. 1995, A&A, 297, 391

  46. [46]

    T., Krieger, A

    Nolte, J. T., Krieger, A. S., Timothy, A. F., et al. 1976, SoPh, 46, 303

  47. [47]

    2010, LRSP, 7, 1 Ó Fionnagáin, D., & Vidotto, A

    Ofman, L. 2010, LRSP, 7, 1 Ó Fionnagáin, D., & Vidotto, A. A. 2018, MNRAS, 476, 2465

  48. [48]

    Parker, E. N. 1958, ApJ, 128, 664 Pérez Paolino, F., Bary, J., Horner, B., Hillenbrand, L. A., & Carvalho, A. 2025, ApJ, 990, 205

  49. [49]

    1999, ApJ, 522, 1148

    Peter, H., & Judge, P. 1999, ApJ, 522, 1148

  50. [50]

    2005, A&A, 434, 1191

    Preusse, S., Kopp, A., Büchner, J., & Motschmann, U. 2005, A&A, 434, 1191

  51. [51]

    2021, SSRv, 217, 36 Rodríguez-Mozos, J., & Moya, A

    Ramstad, R., & Barabash, S. 2021, SSRv, 217, 36 Rodríguez-Mozos, J., & Moya, A. 2017, MNRAS, 471, 4628

  52. [52]

    A., et al

    See, V., Jardine, M., Vidotto, A. A., et al. 2014, A&A, 570, A99

  53. [53]

    1975, JGR, 80, 4675

    Siscoe, G., & Chen, C.-K. 1975, JGR, 80, 4675

  54. [54]

    L., & Sibeck, D

    Siscoe, G. L., & Sibeck, D. G. 1980, JGR, 85, 3549

  55. [55]

    2003, A&A, 411, 517

    Stelzer, B., Fernández, M., Costa, V., et al. 2003, A&A, 411, 517

  56. [56]

    2013, A&A, 558, A141

    Stelzer, B., Frasca, A., Alcalá, J., et al. 2013, A&A, 558, A141

  57. [57]

    A., Blackman, E

    Tarduno, J. A., Blackman, E. G., & Mamajek, E. E. 2014, PEPI, 233, 68

  58. [58]

    A., Cottrell, R

    Tarduno, J. A., Cottrell, R. D., Watkeys, M. K., et al. 2010, Sci, 327, 1238

  59. [59]

    R., Audard, M., & Palla, F

    Telleschi, A., Güdel, M., Briggs, K. R., Audard, M., & Palla, F. 2007, A&A, 468, 425

  60. [60]

    2014, MNRAS, 438, 1162

    Vidotto, A., Jardine, M., Morin, J., et al. 2014, MNRAS, 438, 1162

  61. [61]

    2009, ApJ, 703, 1734

    Vidotto, A., Opher, M., Jatenco-Pereira, V., & Gombosi, T. 2009, ApJ, 703, 1734

  62. [62]

    2010, ApJ, 720, 1262

    Vidotto, A., Opher, M., Jatenco-Pereira, V., & Gombosi, T. 2010, ApJ, 720, 1262

  63. [63]

    A., & Donati, J

    Vidotto, A. A., & Donati, J. F. 2017, A&A, 602, A39

  64. [64]

    A., Jardine, M., Morin, J., et al

    Vidotto, A. A., Jardine, M., Morin, J., et al. 2013, A&A, 557, A67

  65. [65]

    1995, Handbook of Atmospheric Electrodynamics, 2 (CRC Press)

    Volland, H. 1995, Handbook of Atmospheric Electrodynamics, 2 (CRC Press)

  66. [66]

    Ziegler, L., Constable, C., Johnson, C., & Tauxe, L. 2011, GeoJI, 184, 1069 Table A1 (Continued) Star ID L X� (10 30 ) Age r HZ R s,JPO89 constant R s,JPO89 resonant R s Parker (erg s −1 ) (Myr) (au) (R ? ) (R ? ) (R ? ) CoKuLk332/G1 AB 0.493 1.02 1.41 1.03 0.19 0.79 + 1.08 0.18 0.32 + 3.48 0.50 0.49 + 2M J04554046+30 0.011 9.39 0.23 0.92 0.16 0.50 + 0.99...