Tuesday, January 29, 2013

1301.6289 (Benjamin J. Fulton et al.)

The Stellar Obliquity and the Long-period planet in the HAT-P-17 Exoplanetary System    [PDF]

Benjamin J. Fulton, Andrew W. Howard, Joshua N. Winn, Simon Albrecht, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Justin R. Crepp, Gaspar A. Bakos, John Asher Johnson, Joel D. Hartman, Howard Isaacson, Heather A. Knutson, Ming Zhao
We present the measured projected obliquity -- the sky-projected angle between the stellar spin axis and orbital angular momentum -- of the inner planet of the HAT-P-17 multi-planet system. We measure the sky-projected obliquity of the star to be \lambda=19+/-15 degrees by modeling the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect in Keck/HIRES radial velocities (RVs). The anomalous RV time series shows an asymmetry relative to the midtransit time, ordinarily suggesting a nonzero obliquity -- but in this case at least part of the asymmetry may be due to the convective blueshift, increasing the uncertainty in the determination of \lambda. We employ the semi-analytical approach of Hirano et al. (2011) that includes the effects of macroturbulence, instrumental broadening, and convective blueshift to accurately model the anomaly in the net RV caused by the planet eclipsing part of the rotating star. Obliquity measurements are an important tool for testing theories of planet formation and migration. To date, the measured obliquities of ~50 Jovian planets span the full range, from prograde to retrograde, with planets orbiting cool stars preferentially showing alignment of stellar spins and planetary orbits. Our results are consistent with this pattern emerging from tidal interactions in the convective envelopes of cool stars and close-in planets. In addition, our 1.8 years of new RVs for this system show that the orbit of the outer planet is more poorly constrained than previously thought, with an orbital period now in the range of 10-36 years.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.6289

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