Obliquity Constraints for the Extremely Eccentric Sub-Saturn Kepler-1656 b
Ryan A. Rubenzahl, Andrew W. Howard, Samuel Halverson, Cristobal, Petrovich, Isabel Angelo, Gu{\dh}mundur Stef\'ansson, Fei Dai, Aaron, Householder, Benjamin Fulton, Steven R. Gibson, Arpita Roy, Abby P. Shaum,, Howard Isaacson, Max Brodheim, William Deich, Grant M. Hill

TL;DR
This study measures the obliquity of the highly eccentric exoplanet Kepler-1656 b to understand its migration history, finding it likely aligned or moderately misaligned, which informs theories of high-eccentricity migration.
Contribution
First obliquity measurement of Kepler-1656 b, providing insights into its formation and migration mechanisms, and expanding the limited sample of highly eccentric exoplanets with known obliquities.
Findings
Obliquity consistent with alignment or moderate misalignment.
Outer companion's properties support coplanar high-eccentricity migration.
System may be in a state of long-lived eccentricity oscillations.
Abstract
The orbits of close-in exoplanets provide clues to their formation and evolutionary history. Many close-in exoplanets likely formed far out in their protoplanetary disks and migrated to their current orbits, perhaps via high-eccentricity migration (HEM), a process that can also excite obliquities. A handful of known exoplanets are perhaps caught in the act of HEM, as they are observed on highly eccentric orbits with tidal circularization timescales shorter than their ages. One such exoplanet is Kepler-1656 b, which is also the only known non-giant exoplanet (<100 ) with an extreme eccentricity (e=0.84). We measured the sky-projected obliquity of Kepler-1656 b by observing the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect during a transit with the Keck Planet Finder. Our data are consistent with an aligned orbit, but are also consistent with moderate misalignment with deg at 95%…
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 · Space Exploration and Technology · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
