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TESS Giants Transiting Giants. VI. Newly Discovered Hot Jupiters Provide Evidence for Efficient Obliquity Damping after the Main Sequence

Authors :
Nicholas Saunders
Samuel K. Grunblatt
Ashley Chontos
Fei Dai
Daniel Huber
Jingwen Zhang
Guđmundur Stefánsson
Jennifer L. van Saders
Joshua N. Winn
Daniel Hey
Andrew W. Howard
Benjamin Fulton
Howard Isaacson
Corey Beard
Steven Giacalone
Judah Van Zandt
Joseph M. Akana Murphey
Malena Rice
Sarah Blunt
Emma Turtelboom
Paul A. Dalba
Jack Lubin
Casey Brinkman
Emma M. Louden
Emma Page
Cristilyn N. Watkins
Karen A. Collins
Chris Stockdale
Thiam-Guan Tan
Richard P. Schwarz
Bob Massey
Steve B. Howell
Andrew Vanderburg
George R. Ricker
Jon M. Jenkins
Sara Seager
Jessie L. Christiansen
Tansu Daylan
Ben Falk
Max Brodheim
Steven R. Gibson
Grant M. Hill
Bradford Holden
Aaron Householder
Stephen Kaye
Russ R. Laher
Kyle Lanclos
Erik A. Petigura
Arpita Roy
Ryan A. Rubenzahl
Christian Schwab
Abby P. Shaum
Martin M. Sirk
Christopher L. Smith
Josh Walawender
Sherry Yeh
Source :
The Astronomical Journal, Vol 168, Iss 2, p 81 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

The degree of alignment between a star’s spin axis and the orbital plane of its planets (the stellar obliquity) is related to interesting and poorly understood processes that occur during planet formation and evolution. Hot Jupiters orbiting hot stars (≳6250 K) display a wide range of obliquities, while similar planets orbiting cool stars are preferentially aligned. Tidal dissipation is expected to be more rapid in stars with thick convective envelopes, potentially explaining this trend. Evolved stars provide an opportunity to test the damping hypothesis, particularly stars that were hot on the main sequence and have since cooled and developed deep convective envelopes. We present the first systematic study of the obliquities of hot Jupiters orbiting subgiants that recently developed convective envelopes using Rossiter–McLaughlin observations. Our sample includes two newly discovered systems in the Giants Transiting Giants survey (TOI-6029 b, TOI-4379 b). We find that the orbits of hot Jupiters orbiting subgiants that have cooled below ∼6250 K are aligned or nearly aligned with the spin axis of their host stars, indicating rapid tidal realignment after the emergence of a stellar convective envelope. We place an upper limit for the timescale of realignment for hot Jupiters orbiting subgiants at ∼500 Myr. Comparison with a simplified tidal evolution model shows that obliquity damping needs to be ∼4 orders of magnitude more efficient than orbital period decay to damp the obliquity without destroying the planet, which is consistent with recent predictions for tidal dissipation from inertial waves excited by hot Jupiters on misaligned orbits.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15383881
Volume :
168
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5262b598be15457b9a2c9154dee4481f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad543b