The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect in Exoplanet Research [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1709.06376


The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect occurs during a planet’s transit. It provides the main means of measuring the sky-projected spin-orbit angle between a planet’s orbital plane, and its host star’s equatorial plane. Observing the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect is now a near routine procedure. It is an important element in the orbital characterisation of transiting exoplanets. Measurements of the spin-orbit angle have revealed a surprising diversity, far from the placid, Kantian and Laplacian ideals, whereby planets form, and remain, on orbital planes coincident with their star’s equator. This chapter will review a short history of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, how it is modelled, and will summarise the current state of the field before describing other uses for a spectroscopic transit, and alternative methods of measuring the spin-orbit angle.

Read this paper on arXiv…

A. Triaud
Wed, 20 Sep 17
34/57

Comments: Review to appear as a chapter in the “Handbook of Exoplanets”, ed. H. Deeg & J.A. Belmonte