Stellar Companions to TESS Objects of Interest: A Test of Planet-Companion Alignment
Aida Behmard, Fei Dai, Andrew W. Howard

TL;DR
This study catalogs stellar companions to TESS exoplanet hosts using Gaia EDR3 data, investigates their orbital alignments, and finds differing mutual inclination patterns based on planetary system types.
Contribution
It introduces a probabilistic method to identify comoving stellar companions and analyzes their orbital alignments with planets, revealing potential correlations with system architecture.
Findings
Identified 172 stellar companions to 170 TOI hosts.
Systems with small planets tend to have aligned orbits, while systems with close-in giants are more misaligned.
Close-in giant systems often exhibit high stellar obliquities and planet-companion misalignments.
Abstract
We present a catalog of stellar companions to host stars of Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite Objects of Interest (TOIs) identified from a marginalized likelihood ratio test that incorporates astrometric data from the Gaia Early Data Release 3 catalog (EDR3). The likelihood ratio is computed using a probabilistic model that incorporates parallax and proper-motion covariances and marginalizes the distances and 3D velocities of stars in order to identify comoving stellar pairs. We find 172 comoving companions to 170 non-false-positive TOI hosts, consisting of 168 systems with two stars and 2 systems with three stars. Among the 170 TOI hosts, 54 harbor confirmed planets that span a wide range of system architectures. We conduct an investigation of the mutual inclinations between the stellar companion and planetary orbits using Gaia EDR3, which is possible because transiting exoplanets…
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