Teetering Stars: Resonant Excitation of Stellar Obliquities by Hot and Warm Jupiters with External Companions
Kassandra R. Anderson, Dong Lai

TL;DR
This paper explores a secular resonance mechanism driven by external companions that can excite stellar obliquities in hot and warm Jupiter systems, influenced by stellar spin-down and orbital architectures.
Contribution
It introduces a new resonance-based explanation for stellar obliquities in systems with close-in Jupiters and external companions, highlighting differences between hot and warm Jupiters.
Findings
Resonance can excite obliquities during stellar main-sequence lifetime.
Warm Jupiters with distant companions are more likely to have excited obliquities.
Obliquity excitation can occur with a decrease in mutual inclination.
Abstract
Stellar spin-orbit misalignments (obliquities) in hot Jupiter systems have been extensively probed. Such obliquities may reveal clues about hot Jupiter dynamical histories. Common explanations for generating obliquities include high-eccentricity migration and primordial disk misalignment. This paper investigates another mechanism for producing stellar spin-orbit misalignments in systems hosting a close-in planet with an external, modestly inclined companion. Spin-orbit misalignment may be excited due to a secular resonance, occurring when the precession rate of the stellar spin axis (driven by the inner planet) becomes comparable to the nodal precession rate of the inner planet (driven by the companion). Due to the spin-down of the host star via magnetic braking, this resonance may be achieved during the star's main-sequence lifetime for a wide range of planet masses and orbital…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
