Measuring the orbit shrinkage rate of hot Jupiters due to tides
N. M. Ros\'ario (1, 2), S. C. C. Barros (1, 2), O. D. S., Demangeon (1, 2), N. C. Santos (1, 2) ((1) Instituto de, Astrof\'isica e Ci\^encias do Espa\c{c}o, CAUP, (2) Departamento de F\'isica, e Astronomia, Faculdade de Ci\^encias, Universidade do Porto)

TL;DR
This study uses TESS data to measure potential orbital decay in hot Jupiters WASP-18b and WASP-19b, providing new constraints on stellar tidal quality parameters and showing no significant decay detected.
Contribution
The paper presents the first limits on orbital decay rates for WASP-18b and WASP-19b using TESS data, refining the understanding of stellar tidal dissipation.
Findings
No significant orbital decay detected in WASP-18b and WASP-19b.
Lower limits on stellar tidal quality factor $Q'_igstar$ established.
Orbital decay rate in these planets is smaller than in WASP-12b.
Abstract
A tidal interaction between a star and a close-in exoplanet leads to shrinkage of the planetary orbit and eventual tidal disruption of the planet. Measuring the shrinkage of the orbits will allow for the tidal quality parameter of the star () to be measured, which is an important parameter to obtain information about stellar interiors. We analyse data from TESS for two targets known to host close-in hot Jupiters, WASP-18 and WASP-19, to measure the current limits on orbital period variation and provide new constrains on . We modelled the transit shape using all the available TESS observations and fitted the individual transit times of each transit. We used previously published transit times together with our results to fit two models, a constant period model, and a quadratic orbital decay model, MCMC algorithms. We find period change rates of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
