论文标题
Au Mic B是具有自旋轨道对准测量的最年轻的行星
AU Mic b is the Youngest Planet to have a Spin-Orbit Alignment Measurement
论文作者
论文摘要
我们报告了Au \,Mic \,b的天空旋转角度角度的测量值,旋转的海王星大小的行星绕着附近的一个非常年轻的($ \ sim20 $ \,myr)绕着前序列序列m矮人恒星,该序列也载有一个明亮的,边缘,debris debris disk。该行星最近是从径向速度观测值的初步分析中发现的,并确认从NASA的\ textit {tess}任务中从光度数据传输其宿主星。我们在两个部分可观察到的转移过程中获得了Au \,MIC的径向速度测量,并从用{\ textSc {Minerva}} -Australis望远镜阵列制成的高分辨率光谱观测中获得了行星B的一个完整迁移。仅从径向速度获得了Rossiter-mclaughlin效应信号的边际检测,部分原因是Au MIC是非常活跃的恒星,并且缺乏完全的过境覆盖范围以及足够的透射基线。因此,在这项研究中不可能对Au \,MIC \,B的斜率进行精确确定,我们发现了$λ= 47 {^{+26} _ { - 54}}}^{\ circ} $的Sky-projected自旋角度的旋转角度。该结果与行星的轨道都与其宿主恒星的自旋轴对齐或高度未对准一致。我们的测量值独立同意,但远比对其他工具进行的观察值远不如在测量行星低倾斜轨道的其他工具上进行的观察结果。 Au \,MIC是测量了预测的旋转轨角角的最年轻的外球星系统,使其成为研究外行星形成和迁移的关键数据点 - 尤其是考虑到该系统也托管了明亮的碎屑磁盘。
We report measurements of the sky-projected spin-orbit angle for AU\,Mic\,b, a Neptune-size planet orbiting a very young ($\sim20$\,Myr) nearby pre-main sequence M dwarf star which also hosts a bright, edge-on, debris disk. The planet was recently discovered from preliminary analysis of radial velocity observations and confirmed to be transiting its host star from photometric data from the NASA's \textit{TESS} mission. We obtained radial velocity measurements of AU\,Mic over the course of two partially observable transits and one full transit of planet b from high-resolution spectroscopic observations made with the {\textsc{Minerva}}-Australis telescope array. Only a marginal detection of the Rossiter--McLaughlin effect signal was obtained from the radial velocities, in part due to AU Mic being an extremely active star and the lack of full transit coverage plus sufficient out-of-transit baseline. As such, a precise determination of the obliquity for AU\,Mic\,b is not possible in this study and we find a sky-projected spin-orbit angle of $λ= 47{^{+26}_{-54}}^{\circ}$. This result is consistent with both the planet's orbit being aligned or highly misaligned with the spin-axis of its host star. Our measurement independently agrees with, but is far less precise than observations carried out on other instruments around the same time that measure a low obliquity orbit for the planet. AU\,Mic is the youngest exoplanetary system for which the projected spin-orbit angle has been measured, making it a key data point in the study of the formation and migration of exoplanets -- particularly given that the system is also host to a bright debris disk.