On the detectability of star-planet interaction
Brendan P. Miller, Elena Gallo, Jason T. Wright, and Andrea K. Dupree

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential for detecting star-planet magnetic interactions in the WASP-18 system through optical and X-ray observations, finding no significant activity enhancements and questioning the method's reliability.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed observational analysis of star-planet interaction in the WASP-18 system, showing no detectable activity enhancement and highlighting limitations of current detection methods.
Findings
No significant chromospheric variability detected.
The star exhibits low X-ray luminosity, indicating weak coronal activity.
Star-planet interaction signals, if transient, may be missed in short observations.
Abstract
Magnetic (or tidal) interactions between "hot Jupiters" and their host stars can potentially enhance chromospheric and coronal activity. An ideal testbed for investigating this effect is provided by the extreme WASP-18 system, which features a massive (~10 times Jupiter) close-in (~1 day period) transiting planet orbiting a young F6 star. Optical and X-ray observations of WASP-18 were conducted in November 2011. The high-resolution echelle spectrograph MIKE was used on the 6.5m Magellan Clay telescope to obtain 13 spectra spanning planetary orbital phases of 0.7-1.4, while the X-ray Telescope on Swift provided contemporaneous monitoring with a stacked exposure of ~50 ks. The cores of the Ca II H and K lines do not show significant variability over multiple orbits spanning ~8 d, in contrast to the expectation of phase-dependent chromospheric activity enhancements for efficient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical Astronomy and Related Studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astro and Planetary Science
