Hot Stars With Kepler Planets Have High Obliquities
Emma M. Louden, Joshua N. Winn, Erik A. Petigura, Howard Isaacson,, Andrew W. Howard, Kento Masuda, Simon Albrecht, Molly R. Kosiarek

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic data to show that hot stars with small transiting planets generally have high obliquities, indicating misaligned spin-orbit configurations, especially in hotter stars, suggesting a common formation process.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical evidence that hot stars with small planets tend to have high obliquities, extending previous findings from hot Jupiters to smaller planets.
Findings
Hot stars with small planets have higher vsini than control stars.
Mean sini is 0.856, indicating significant obliquity.
Hotter stars show broader obliquity distributions, often random.
Abstract
It has been known for a decade that hot stars with hot Jupiters tend to have high obliquities. Less is known about the degree of spin-orbit alignment for hot stars with other kinds of planets. Here, we re-assess the obliquities of hot Kepler stars with transiting planets smaller than Neptune, based on spectroscopic measurements of their projected rotation velocities (vsini). The basis of the method is that a lower obliquity -- all other things being equal -- causes sini to be closer to unity and increases the value of vsini. We sought evidence for this effect using a sample of 150 Kepler stars with effective temperatures between 5950 and 6550K and a control sample of 101 stars with matching spectroscopic properties and random orientations. The planet hosts have systematically higher values of vsini than the control stars, but not by enough to be compatible with perfect spin-orbit…
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