A Tendency Toward Alignment in Single-star Warm-Jupiter Systems

Rice, Malena; Howard, Andrew W.; Dai, Fei; Logsdon, Sarah E.; Wang, Songhu; Giacalone, Steven; Isaacson, Howard; Holcomb, Rae; Wang, Xian-Yu; Stefánsson, Guđmundur; Brinkman, Casey; Schweiker, Heidi

United States, China, Australia

Abstract

The distribution of spin-orbit angles for systems with wide-separation, tidally detached exoplanets offers a unique constraint on the prevalence of dynamically violent planetary evolution histories. Tidally detached planets provide a relatively unbiased view of the primordial stellar obliquity distribution, as they cannot tidally realign within the system lifetime. We present the third result from our Stellar Obliquities in Long-period Exoplanet Systems (SOLES) survey: a measurement of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect across two transits of the tidally detached warm Jupiter TOI-1478 b with the WIYN/NEID and Keck/HIRES spectrographs, revealing a sky-projected spin-orbit angle $\lambda ={6.2}_{-5.5}^{+5.9^\circ} $ . Combining this new measurement with the full set of archival obliquity measurements, including two previous constraints from the SOLES survey, we demonstrate that, in single-star systems, tidally detached warm Jupiters are preferentially more aligned than closer-orbiting hot Jupiters. This finding has two key implications: (1) planets in single-star systems tend to form within aligned protoplanetary disks, and (2) warm Jupiters form more quiescently than hot Jupiters, which, in single-star systems, are likely perturbed into a misaligned state through planet-planet interactions in the post-disk-dispersal phase. We also find that lower-mass Saturns span a wide range of spin-orbit angles, suggesting a prevalence of planet-planet scattering and/or secular mechanisms in these systems.

2022 The Astronomical Journal
Gaia 36