Evidence for Primordial Alignment: Insights from Stellar Obliquity Measurements for Compact Sub-Saturn Systems

Despite decades of effort, the mechanisms by which the spin axis of a star and the orbital axes of its planets become misaligned remain elusive. Particularly, it is of great interest whether the large spin-orbit misalignments observed are driven primarily by high-eccentricity migration -- expected t...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2024-08
Hauptverfasser: Radzom, Brandon T, Dong, Jiayin, Rice, Malena, Xian-Yu, Wang, Yee, Samuel W, Fairnington, Tyler R, Petrovich, Cristobal, Wang, Songhu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite decades of effort, the mechanisms by which the spin axis of a star and the orbital axes of its planets become misaligned remain elusive. Particularly, it is of great interest whether the large spin-orbit misalignments observed are driven primarily by high-eccentricity migration -- expected to have occurred for short-period, isolated planets -- or reflect a more universal process that operates across systems with a variety of present-day architectures. Compact multi-planet systems offer a unique opportunity to differentiate between these competing hypotheses, as their tightly-packed configurations preclude violent dynamical histories, including high-eccentricity migration, allowing them to trace the primordial disk plane. In this context, we report measurements of the sky-projected stellar obliquity (\(\lambda\)) via the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect for two sub-Saturns in multiple-transiting systems: TOI-5126 b (\(\lambda=1\pm 48 ^\circ\)) and TOI-5398 b (\(\lambda=-8.1^{+5.3 \circ}_{-6.3}\)). Both are spin-orbit aligned, joining a fast-growing group of just three other compact sub-Saturn systems, all of which exhibit spin-orbit alignment. In aggregate with archival data, our results strongly suggest that sub-Saturn systems are primordially aligned and become misaligned largely in the post-disk phase, as appears to be the case increasingly for other exoplanet populations.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2404.06504