The On/Off Nature of Star-Planet Interactions
Evgenya Shkolnik (University of Hawaii), David A. Bohlender (Herzberg, Institute of Astrophysics, NRC), Gordon A.H. Walker (University of British, Columbia), Andrew Collier Cameron (University of St. Andrews)

TL;DR
This study investigates the variable magnetic interactions between stars and hot Jupiters, revealing an on/off pattern likely influenced by stellar magnetic cycles, and explores their potential to probe exoplanet magnetic fields.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of the on/off nature of star-planet magnetic interactions and links variability to stellar magnetic cycle phases.
Findings
Star-planet interaction is cyclic and varies with stellar magnetic activity.
Observed variability correlates with the planet's magnetic moment proxies.
On/off interaction pattern is likely due to changing stellar magnetic field structures.
Abstract
Evidence suggesting an observable magnetic interaction between a star and its hot Jupiter appears as a cyclic variation of stellar activity synchronized to the planet's orbit. In this study, we monitored the chromospheric activity of 7 stars with hot Jupiters using new high-resolution echelle spectra collected with ESPaDOnS over a few nights in 2005 and 2006 from the CFHT. We searched for variability in several stellar activity indicators (Ca II H, K, the Ca II infrared triplet, Halpha, and He I). HD 179949 has been observed almost every year since 2001. Synchronicity of the Ca II H & K emission with the orbit is clearly seen in four out of six epochs, while rotational modulation with P_rot=7 days is apparent in the other two seasons. We observe a similar phenomenon on upsilon And, which displays rotational modulation (P_rot=12 days) in September 2005, in 2002 and 2003 variations appear…
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