A Larger Sample Confirms Small Planets Around Hot Stars Are Misaligned
Emma M. Louden, Songhu Wang, Joshua N. Winn, Erik A. Petigura, Howard, Isaacson, Luke Handley, Samuel W. Yee, Corey Beard, Joseph M. Akana Murphy,, and Gregory Laughlin

TL;DR
This study investigates the obliquity distribution of hot stars with small transiting planets, revealing that hotter stars tend to have higher obliquities, challenging the idea that misalignment is exclusive to hot Jupiters.
Contribution
It extends obliquity studies to smaller planets around hot stars, showing that high obliquities are common beyond hot Jupiters and are linked to stellar temperature.
Findings
Planet hosts tend to have lower obliquities than control stars.
Hotter planet-hosting stars show broader obliquity distributions.
High obliquities are not unique to hot Jupiters but also occur around smaller planets.
Abstract
The distribution of stellar obliquities provides critical insight into the formation and evolution pathways of exoplanets. In the past decade, it was found that hot stars hosting hot Jupiters are more likely to have high obliquities than cool stars, but it is not clear whether this trend exists only for hot Jupiters or holds for other types of planets. In this work, we extend the study of the obliquities of hot (6250-7000\,K) stars with transiting super-Earth and sub-Neptune-sized planets. We constrain the obliquity distribution based on measurements of the stars' projected rotation velocities. Our sample consists of 170 TESS and \textit{Kepler} planet-hosting stars and 180 control stars chosen to have indistinguishable spectroscopic characteristics. In our analysis, we find evidence suggesting that the planet hosts have a systematically higher compared to the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
