HAT-P-11: Discovery of a Second Planet and a Clue to Understanding Exoplanet Obliquities

  • Yee S
  • Petigura E
  • Fulton B
  • et al.
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Abstract

HAT-P-11 is a mid-K dwarf that hosts one of the first Neptune-sized planets found outside the solar system. The orbit of HAT-P-11b is misaligned with the star’s spin—one of the few known cases of a misaligned planet orbiting a star less massive than the Sun. We find an additional planet in the system based on a decade of precision radial velocity (RV) measurements from Keck/High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer. HAT-P-11c is similar to Jupiter in its mass ( M J ) and orbital period ( year), but has a much more eccentric orbit ( e  = 0.60 ± 0.03). In our joint modeling of RV and stellar activity, we found an activity-induced RV signal of ∼7  , consistent with other active K dwarfs, but significantly smaller than the 31  reflex motion due to HAT-P-11c. We investigated the dynamical coupling between HAT-P-11b and c as a possible explanation for HAT-P-11b’s misaligned orbit, finding that planet–planet Kozai interactions cannot tilt planet b’s orbit due to general relativistic precession; however, nodal precession operating on million year timescales is a viable mechanism to explain HAT-P-11b’s high obliquity. This leaves open the question of why HAT-P-11c may have such a tilted orbit. At a distance of 38 pc, the HAT-P-11 system offers rich opportunities for further exoplanet characterization through astrometry and direct imaging.

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Yee, S. W., Petigura, E. A., Fulton, B. J., Knutson, H. A., Batygin, K., Bakos, G. Á., … Weiss, L. M. (2018). HAT-P-11: Discovery of a Second Planet and a Clue to Understanding Exoplanet Obliquities. The Astronomical Journal, 155(6), 255. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/aabfec

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