The First Spin-Orbit Obliquity of an M dwarf/brown dwarf System: An eccentric and aligned TOI-2119 b
Lauren Doyle, Caleb I. Ca\~nas, Jessica E. Libby-Roberts, Heather M., Cegla, Gu{\dh}mundur K. Stef\'ansson, David Anderson, David J. Armstrong,, Chad Bender, Daniel Bayliss, Theron W. Carmichael, Sarah Casewell, Shubham, Kanodia, Marina Lafarga, Andrea S.J. Lin

TL;DR
This study measures the obliquity of the first M dwarf/brown dwarf system, TOI-2119, revealing an aligned orbit and providing insights into stellar activity and rotation.
Contribution
It presents the first obliquity measurement of an M dwarf/brown dwarf system using the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, confirming system alignment and analyzing stellar surface activity.
Findings
The system has a projected obliquity of approximately 0°, indicating alignment.
The three-dimensional obliquity is about 15.7°, consistent with alignment.
Tentative evidence for centre-to-limb variations; no clear differential rotation detected.
Abstract
We report the first instance of an M dwarf/brown dwarf obliquity measurement for the TOI-2119 system using the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect. TOI-2119 b is a transiting brown dwarf orbiting a young, active early M dwarf ( = 3553 K). It has a mass of 64.4 M and radius of 1.08 R, with an eccentric orbit ( = 0.3) at a period of 7.2 days. For this analysis, we utilise NEID spectroscopic transit observations and ground based simultaneous transit photometry from the Astrophysical Research Consortium (ARC) and the Las Campanas Remote Observatory (LCRO). We fit all available data of TOI-2119 b to refine the brown dwarf parameters and update the ephemeris. The classical Rossiter-McLaughlin technique yields a projected star-planet obliquity of and a three-dimensional obliquity of . Additionally, we spatially…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
