The star HIP 41378 potentially misaligned with its cohort of long-period planets
Source
Astronomy and Astrophysics
ISSN
00046361
Date Issued
2025-09-01
Author(s)
Grouffal, S.
Santerne, A.
Bourrier, V.
Kunovac, V.
Dressing, C.
Akinsanmi, B.
Armstrong, C.
Baliwal, S.
Balsalobre-Ruza, O.
Barros, S. C.C.
Bayliss, D.
Crossfield, I. J.M.
Demangeon, O.
Dumusque, X.
Giacalone, S.
Harada, C. K.
Isaacson, H.
Kellermann, H.
Lillo-Box, J.
Llama, J.
Mortier, A.
Palle, E.
Rajpurohit, A. S.
Rice, M.
Santos, N. C.
Seidel, J. V.
Sharma, R.
Sousa, S. G.
Thomas, L.
Turtelboom, E. V.
Udry, S.
Wheatley, P. J.
Abstract
The obliquity between the stellar spin axis and the planetary orbit, detected via the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect, is a tracer of the formation history of planetary systems. While obliquity measurements have been extensively applied to hot Jupiters and short-period planets, they remain rare for cold and long-period planets due to observational challenges, particularly their long transit durations. We report the detection of the RM effect for the 19-hour transit of HIP 41378 f, a temperate giant planet on a 542-day orbit, observed through a worldwide spectroscopic campaign. We measured a slight projected obliquity of 21 ± 8 and a significant 3D spin-orbit angle of 52 ± 6, based on the measurement of the stellar rotation period. HIP 41378 f is part a transiting system of five planets with planets close to mean motion resonances. The observed misalignment likely reflects a primordial tilt of the stellar spin axis relative to the protoplanetary disk, rather than dynamical interactions. HIP 41378 f is the first non-eccentric long-period planet (P>100 days) observed with the RM effect, opening new constraints on planetary formation theories. This observation should motivate the exploration of planetary obliquities across a longer range of orbital distances through international collaboration.
Keywords
Planets and satellites: individual: HIP 41378 | Stars: rotation | Techniques: spectroscopic
