Activity induced variation in spin-orbit angles as derived from Rossiter-McLaughlin measurements
M. Oshagh, A. H. M. J. Triaud, A. Burdanov, P. Figueira, A. Reiners,, N. C. Santos, J. Faria, G. Boue, R. F. Diaz, S. Dreizler, S. Boldt, L., Delrez, E. Ducrot, M. Gillon, A. Guzman Mesa, E. Jehin, S. Khalafinejad, S., Kohl, L. Serrano, S. Udry

TL;DR
This study shows that stellar activity causes significant variation in measured spin-orbit angles from transit to transit, affecting the accuracy of exoplanet system characterization.
Contribution
It provides the first analysis of how stellar activity impacts RM measurements and proposes methods to mitigate this effect.
Findings
Spin-orbit angle can vary up to 42 degrees between transits.
Variation exceeds predictions from simulations.
Multiple observations and simultaneous photometry improve measurement reliability.
Abstract
One of the most powerful methods used to estimate sky-projected spin-orbit angles of exoplanetary systems is through a spectroscopic transit observation known as the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect. So far mostly single RM observations have been used to estimate the spin-orbit angle, and thus there have been no studies regarding the variation of estimated spin-orbit angle from transit to transit. Stellar activity can alter the shape of photometric transit light curves and in a similar way they can deform the RM signal. In this paper we discuss several RM observations, obtained using the HARPS spectrograph, of known transiting planets that all transit extremely active stars, and by analyzing them individually we assess the variation in the estimated spin-orbit angle. Our results reveal that the estimated spin-orbit angle can vary significantly (up to 42 degrees) from transit to transit,…
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