The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect Revolutions: An ultra-short period planet and a warm mini-Neptune on perpendicular orbits
V. Bourrier, C. Lovis, M. Cretignier, R. Allart, X. Dumusque, J.-B., Delisle, A. Deline, S. G. Sousa, V. Adibekyan, Y. Alibert, S. C. C. Barros,, F. Borsa, S. Cristiani, O. Demangeon, D. Ehrenreich, P. Figueira, J.I., Gonz\'alez Hern\'andez, M. Lendl, J. Lillo-Box, G. Lo Curto

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new technique to measure the spin-orbit angles of small exoplanets using spectral transit data, revealing that two planets in the HD3167 system are on nearly perpendicular orbits, which informs their dynamical history.
Contribution
The paper presents the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect Revolutions technique, enabling the measurement of spin-orbit angles for small exoplanets, and applies it to the HD3167 system to uncover its orbital architecture.
Findings
HD3167b is aligned with the star's equator.
HD3167c has a high sky-projected spin-orbit angle.
The two planets are on nearly perpendicular orbits.
Abstract
Comparisons of the alignment of exoplanets with a common host star can be used to distinguish among concurrent evolution scenarios. However, multi-planet systems usually host mini-Neptunes and super-Earths, whose size make orbital architecture measurements challenging. We introduce the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect Revolutions technique, which can access spin-orbit angles of small planets by exploiting the full information contained in spectral transit time series. We validated the technique on published HARPS-N data of the mini-Neptune HD3167c, refining its high sky-projected spin-orbit angle (-108.9+5.4-5.5 deg), and we applied it to new ESPRESSO observations of the super-Earth HD3167b, revealing an aligned orbit (-6.6+6.6-7.9 deg). Surprisingly different variations in the contrast of the stellar lines occulted by the planets can be reconciled with a latitudinal dependence of the stellar…
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