Refined architecture of the WASP-8 system: a cautionary tale for traditional Rossiter-McLaughlin analysis
V. Bourrier, H.M. Cegla, C. Lovis, A. Wyttenbach

TL;DR
This study reanalyzed the WASP-8 system using a novel technique that isolates local stellar spectra during planetary transits, revealing biases in previous measurements and providing more accurate stellar rotation and obliquity estimates.
Contribution
The paper introduces the 'reloaded RM' technique, which isolates local stellar spectra during transits, reducing biases in Rossiter-McLaughlin effect analysis.
Findings
Identified a 35% variation in local stellar CCF contrast along the transit.
Revised measurements of stellar rotation velocity and obliquity with higher accuracy.
Found no strong evidence for differential rotation, but hints of poleward rotation differences.
Abstract
Probing the trajectory of a transiting planet across the disk of its star through the analysis of its Rossiter-McLaughlin effect can be used to measure the differential rotation of the host star and the true obliquity of the system. Highly misaligned systems could be particularly conducive to these mesurements, which is why we reanalysed the HARPS transit spectra of WASP-8b using the 'Rossiter-McLaughlin effect reloaded' (reloaded RM) technique. This approach allows us to isolate the local stellar CCF emitted by the planet-occulted regions. As a result we identified a 35% variation in the local CCF contrast along the transit chord, which might trace a deepening of the stellar lines from the equator to the poles. Whatever its origin, such an effect cannot be detected when analyzing the RV centroids of the disk-integrated CCFs through a traditional velocimetric analysis of the RM…
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