TOI-880 is an Aligned, Coplanar, Multi-planet System
Elina Y. Zhang, Huan-Yu Teng, Fei Dai, Andrew W. Howard, Samuel P. Halverson, Howard Isaacson, Ryan A. Rubenzahl, Xian-Yu Wang, Songhu Wang, Benjamin J. Fulton, Louise D. Nielsen, Jack Lubin, Steven Giacalone, Luke B. Handley, Erik A. Petigura, Emma V. Turtelboom

TL;DR
This study measures the spin-orbit alignment of the multi-planet system TOI-880, finding it to be well-aligned and coplanar, which supports theories of disk-driven planet formation and evolution.
Contribution
First measurement of the sky-projected spin-orbit angle in a multi-transiting system using Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, confirming a well-aligned, coplanar configuration.
Findings
Host star is a slow-rotating K-type star.
Planet c's obliquity is consistent with zero, indicating a prograde, aligned orbit.
System is likely to remain coplanar due to slow nodal precession.
Abstract
Although many cases of stellar spin-orbit misalignment are known, it is usually unclear whether a single planet's orbit was tilted or if the entire protoplanetary disk was misaligned. Measuring stellar obliquities in multi-transiting planetary systems helps to distinguish these possibilities. Here, we present a measurement of the sky-projected spin-orbit angle for TOI-880 c (TOI-880.01), a member of a system of three transiting planets, using the Keck Planet Finder (KPF). We found that the host star is a K-type star ( K). Planet b (TOI-880.02) has a radius of and an orbital period of days; planet c (TOI-880.01) is a Neptune-sized planet with on a -day orbit; and planet d (TOI-880.03) has a radius of and a period of days. By modeling the…
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