Spot-Crossing Variations Confirm a Misaligned Orbit for a Planet Transiting an M Dwarf
Abstract
TOI-3884~b is an unusual 6.4~R planet orbiting an M4 host, whose transits display large and persistent spot-crossing events. We used the Tierras Observatory to monitor both the long-term photometric variability of TOI-3884 and changes in the spot-crossing events across multiple transits of the planet. We show that the star rotates with a period of 11.020 0.015~days. We simultaneously model the rotational modulation of the star and variations in transit shapes that arise due to rotation of the spot, allowing us to determine the true stellar obliquity, . The data are best described by a planet on a misaligned orbit around a highly inclined star ( = 77.4 +2.3-2.5; i = 22.3^+1.8-1.6) that hosts a large polar starspot (rspot = 31.2^+2.4-1.9; λspot = 80.51.2). Archival photometry from the Zwicky Transient Facility suggests that this polar spot has persisted on TOI-3884 for at least seven years. The TOI-3884 system provides a benchmark for studying the evolution of a polar spot on an M dwarf.
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