Rossiter--McLaughlin models and their effect on estimates of stellar rotation, illustrated using six WASP systems
D. J. A. Brown, A. H. M. J. Triaud, A. P. Doyle, M. Gillon, M. Lendl,, D. R. Anderson, A. Collier Cameron, G. H\'ebrard, C. Hellier, C. Lovis, P. F., L. Maxted, F. Pepe, D. Pollacco, D. Queloz, B. Smalley

TL;DR
This study compares different models for Rossiter--McLaughlin effect measurements on six WASP exoplanets, revealing discrepancies in stellar rotation velocity estimates but consistent projected spin--orbit angle results, including aligned and misaligned orbits.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of three models for measuring stellar spin--orbit angles, highlighting their differences and implications for understanding exoplanet orbital alignments.
Findings
Different models produce varying stellar rotation velocities.
Projected spin--orbit angles are consistent across models.
Identified aligned, slightly misaligned, and strongly misaligned exoplanet orbits.
Abstract
We present new measurements of the projected spin--orbit angle for six WASP hot Jupiters, four of which are new to the literature (WASP-61, -62, -76, and -78), and two of which are new analyses of previously measured systems using new data (WASP-71, and -79). We use three different models based on two different techniques: radial velocity measurements of the Rossiter--McLaughlin effect, and Doppler tomography. Our comparison of the different models reveals that they produce projected stellar rotation velocities () measurements often in disagreement with each other and with estimates obtained from spectral line broadening. The Bou\'e model for the Rossiter--McLaughlin effect consistently underestimates the value of compared to the Hirano model. Although differed, the effect on was small for our sample, with all three…
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