A Testbed for Tidal Migration: the 3D Architecture of an Eccentric Hot Jupiter HD 118203 b Accompanied by a Possibly Aligned Outer Giant Planet
Jingwen Zhang, Daniel Huber, Lauren M. Weiss, Jerry W. Xuan, Jennifer, A. Burt, Fei Dai, Nicholas Saunders, Erik A. Petigura, Ryan A. Rubenzahl,, Joshua N. Winn, Sharon X. Wang, Judah Van Zandt, Max Brodheim, Zachary R., Claytor, Ian Crossfield, William Deich, Benjamin J. Fulton

TL;DR
This study presents a detailed 3D architecture of the HD 118203 system, revealing a nearly aligned hot Jupiter and outer giant planet, supporting the coplanar high-eccentricity tidal migration scenario.
Contribution
First to measure both the true spin-orbit angle of a hot Jupiter and the mutual inclination with an outer planet in the same system.
Findings
Hot Jupiter HD 118203 b is nearly aligned with the stellar spin axis.
Outer giant planet HD 118203 c has a low mutual inclination with the hot Jupiter.
System's architecture supports coplanar high-eccentricity tidal migration.
Abstract
Characterizing outer companions to hot Jupiters plays a crucial role in deciphering their origins. We present the discovery of a long-period giant planet, HD 118203 c (, AU) exterior to a close-in eccentric hot Jupiter HD 118203 b (, , , ) based on twenty-year radial velocities. Using Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) observations from the Keck Planet Finder (KPF), we measured a low sky-projected spin-orbit angle for HD 118203 b and detected stellar oscillations in the host star, confirming its evolved status. Combining the RM observation with the stellar inclination measurement, we constrained the true spin-orbit angle of HD 118203 b as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
