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The TESS–Keck Survey. IV. A Retrograde, Polar Orbit for the Ultra-low-density, Hot Super-Neptune WASP-107b

Authors :
Courtney D. Dressing
Daniel Huber
Steven Giacalone
Ryan A. Rubenzahl
Stephen R. Kane
Howard Isaacson
Ian J. M. Crossfield
Arpita Roy
Natalie M. Batalha
Ashley Chontos
Paul Robertson
Lee J. Rosenthal
Nicholas Scarsdale
Erik A. Petigura
Andrew W. Mayo
Andrew W. Howard
Lauren M. Weiss
Teo Mocnik
Corey Beard
Jack Lubin
Fei Dai
Benjamin J. Fulton
Michelle L. Hill
Joseph M. Akana Murphy
Source :
The Astronomical Journal. 161:119
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2021.

Abstract

We measured the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect of WASP-107b during a single transit with Keck/HIRES. We found the sky-projected inclination of WASP-107b's orbit, relative to its host star's rotation axis, to be $|\lambda| = {118}^{+38}_{-19}$ degrees. This confirms the misaligned/polar orbit that was previously suggested from spot-crossing events and adds WASP-107b to the growing population of hot Neptunes in polar orbits around cool stars. WASP-107b is also the fourth such planet to have a known distant planetary companion. We examined several dynamical pathways by which this companion could have induced such an obliquity in WASP-107b. We find that nodal precession and disk dispersal-driven tilting can both explain the current orbital geometry while Kozai-Lidov cycles are suppressed by general relativity. While each hypothesis requires a mutual inclination between the two planets, nodal precession requires a much larger angle which for WASP-107 is on the threshold of detectability with future Gaia astrometric data. As nodal precession has no stellar type dependence, but disk dispersal-driven tilting does, distinguishing between these two models is best done on the population level. Finding and characterizing more extrasolar systems like WASP-107 will additionally help distinguish whether the distribution of hot-Neptune obliquities is a dichotomy of aligned and polar orbits or if we are uniformly sampling obliquities during nodal precession cycles.<br />Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, to be published in The Astronomical Journal

Details

ISSN :
15383881 and 00046256
Volume :
161
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....46fb56700ab80cf8a267fc54f55db9c5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/abd177