MOST detects variability on tau Bootis possibly induced by its planetary companion
Gordon A.H. Walker, Bryce Croll, Jaymie M. Matthews, Rainer Kuschnig,, Daniel Huber, Werner W. Weiss, Evgenya Shkolnik, Slavek M. Rucinski, David B., Guenther, Anthony F.J. Moffat, Dimitar Sasselov

TL;DR
This study uses MOST satellite data and Ca II K line observations to identify a persistent, phase-locked active region on tau Boo A, likely induced by its planetary companion, demonstrating star-planet magnetic interaction.
Contribution
First detection of a star-planet magnetic interaction region on tau Boo A using combined photometry and Ca II K line data, showing phase-locked variability over hundreds of planetary orbits.
Findings
Active region tracks planetary orbit within 0.0015 days.
Region varies in brightness by about 1 millimagnitude.
Evidence suggests magnetic interaction, not tidal effects.
Abstract
(abridged) There is considerable interest in the possible interaction between parent stars and giant planetary companions in 51 Peg-type systems. We demonstrate from MOST satellite photometry and Ca II K line emission that there has been a persistent, variable region on the surface of tau Boo A which tracked its giant planetary companion for some 440 planetary revolutions and lies ~68deg (phi=0.8) in advance of the sub-planetary point. The light curves are folded on a range of periods centered on the planetary orbital period and phase dependent variability is quantified by Fourier methods and by the mean absolute deviation (MAD) of the folded data for both the photometry and the Ca II K line reversals. The region varies in brightness on the time scale of a rotation by ~1 mmag. In 2004 it resembled a dark spot of variable depth, while in 2005 it varied between bright and dark. Over the…
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