The Spin-Orbit Alignment of 8 Warm Gas Giant Systems
Juan I. Espinoza-Retamal, Andr\'es Jord\'an, Rafael Brahm, Cristobal Petrovich, Elyar Sedaghati, Gu{\dh}mundur Stef\'ansson, Melissa J. Hobson, Marcelo Tala Pinto, Diego J. Mu\~noz, Gavin Boyle, Rodrigo Leiva, Vincent Suc

TL;DR
This study measures the spin-orbit alignment of 8 warm gas giant exoplanets, revealing they are generally aligned and suggesting different formation and evolution pathways compared to hot Jupiters.
Contribution
First comprehensive measurement of 3D obliquities for multiple warm gas giants, showing they are more aligned than hot Jupiters, indicating different evolutionary histories.
Findings
Warm Jupiters are mostly aligned with stellar equators.
Hot Jupiters exhibit a wide range of misalignments, nearly isotropic.
Saturn-mass planets may be slightly more misaligned than Jupiters.
Abstract
Essential information about the formation and evolution of planetary systems can be found in their architectures -- in particular, in stellar obliquity () -- as they serve as a signature of their dynamical evolution. Here, we present ESPRESSO observations of the Rossiter-Mclaughlin (RM) effect of 8 warm gas giants, revealing that independent of the eccentricities, all of them have relatively aligned orbits. Our 5 warm Jupiters -- WASP-106 b, WASP-130 b, TOI-558 b, TOI-4515 b, and TOI-5027 b -- have sky-projected obliquities deg while the 2 less massive warm Saturns -- K2-139 b and K2-329 A b -- are slightly misaligned having deg. Furthermore, for K2-139 b, K2-329 A b, and TOI-4515 b, we also measure true 3D obliquities deg. We also report a non-detection of the RM effect produced by TOI-2179 b. Through hierarchical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Astro and Planetary Science
