A Window on Exoplanet Dynamical Histories: Rossiter-McLaughlin Observations of WASP-13b and WASP-32b

Abstract

We present Rossiter-McLaughlin observations of WASP-13b and WASP-32b and determine the sky-projected angle between the normal of the planetary orbit and the stellar rotation axis (λ). WASP-13b and WASP-32b both have prograde orbits and are consistent with alignment with measured sky-projected angles of λ=8^+13-12 and λ=-2^+17-19, respectively. Both WASP-13 and WASP-32 have Teff<6250K and therefore these systems support the general trend that aligned planetary systems are preferentially found orbiting cool host stars. A Lomb-Scargle periodogram analysis was carried out on archival SuperWASP data for both systems. A statistically significant stellar rotation period detection (above 99.9\% confidence) was identified for the WASP-32 system with Prot=11.6 1.0 days. This rotation period is in agreement with the predicted stellar rotation period calculated from the stellar radius, R, and v i if a stellar inclination of i=90 is assumed. With the determined rotation period, the true 3D angle between the stellar rotation axis and the planetary orbit, , was found to be =11 14. We conclude with a discussion on the alignment of systems around cool host stars with Teff<6150K by calculating the tidal dissipation timescale. We find that systems with short tidal dissipation timescales are preferentially aligned and systems with long tidal dissipation timescales have a broad range of obliquities.

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