Spin-orbit angle measurements for six southern transiting planets; New insights into the dynamical origins of hot Jupiters
Amaury H.M.J. Triaud, Andrew Collier Cameron, Didier Queloz, David R., Anderson, Micha\"el Gillon, Leslie Hebb, Coel Hellier, Beno\^it Loeillet,, Pierre F. Maxted, Michel Mayor, Francesco Pepe, Don Pollacco, Damien, S\'egransan, Barry Smalley, St\'ephane Udry, Richard G. West

TL;DR
This study measures the spin-orbit angles of six hot Jupiters using the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, revealing many are misaligned and suggesting a dynamical origin for their formation, challenging standard disc migration models.
Contribution
The paper provides new measurements of spin-orbit angles for six hot Jupiters, expanding the statistical understanding of their orbital alignments and implications for planet formation theories.
Findings
Approximately 50-85% of hot Jupiters have significant spin-orbit misalignments.
Most orbits are nearly circular with minimal eccentricity.
Results support a dynamical and tidal formation scenario over simple disc migration.
Abstract
For transiting planets, the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect allows the measurement of the sky-projected angle beta between the stellar rotation axis and a planet's orbital axis. Using the HARPS spectrograph, we observed the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect for six transiting hot Jupiters found by the WASP consortium. We combine these with long term radial velocity measurements obtained with CORALIE. We found that three of our targets have a projected spin-orbit angle above 90 degrees: WASP-2b: beta = 153 (+11 -15), WASP-15b: beta = 139.6 (+5.2 -4.3) and WASP-17b: beta = 148.5 (+5.1 -4.2); the other three (WASP-4b, WASP-5b and WASP-18b) have angles compatible with 0 degrees. There is no dependence between the misaligned angle and planet mass nor with any other planetary parameter. All orbits are close to circular, with only one firm detection of eccentricity on WASP-18b with e = 0.00848 (+0.00085…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
