Co-orbital exoplanets from close-period candidates: the TOI-178 case

Leleu, A.; Lillo-Box, J.; Sestovic, M.; Robutel, P.; Correia, A. C. M.; Hara, N.; Angerhausen, D.; Grimm, S.; Schneider, J. (2019). Co-orbital exoplanets from close-period candidates: the TOI-178 case. Astronomy and astrophysics, 624(A46), A46. EDP Sciences 10.1051/0004-6361/201834901

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Despite the existence of co-orbital bodies in the solar system, and the prediction of the formation of co-orbital planets by planetary system formation models, no co-orbital exoplanets (also called trojans) have been detected thus far. Here we study the signature of co-orbital exoplanets in transit surveys when two planet candidates in the system orbit the star with similar periods. Such pair of candidates could be discarded as false positives because they are not Hill-stable. However, horseshoe or long libration period tadpole co-orbital configurations can explain such period similarity. This degeneracy can be solved by considering the Transit Timing Variations (TTVs) of each planet. We then focus on the three planet candidates system TOI-178: the two outer candidates of that system have similar orbital period and had an angular separation near π/3 during the TESS observation of sector 2. Based on the announced orbits, the long-term stability of the system requires the two close-period planets to be co-orbitals. Our independent detrending and transit search recover and slightly favour the three orbits close to a 3:2:2 resonant chain found by the TESS pipeline, although we cannot exclude an alias that would put the system close to a 4:3:2 configuration. We then analyse in more detail the co-orbital scenario. We show that despite the influence of an inner planet just outside the 2:3 mean-motion resonance, this potential co-orbital system can be stable on the Giga-year time-scale for a variety of planetary masses, either on a trojan or a horseshoe orbit. We predict that large TTVs should arise in such configuration with a period of several hundred days. We then show how the mass of each planet can be retrieved from these TTVs.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

08 Faculty of Science > Physics Institute > Space Research and Planetary Sciences
08 Faculty of Science > Physics Institute
10 Strategic Research Centers > Center for Space and Habitability (CSH)
08 Faculty of Science > Physics Institute > NCCR PlanetS

UniBE Contributor:

Leleu, Adrien Sebastien, Sestovic, Marko, Angerhausen, Daniel, Grimm, Simon Lukas

Subjects:

000 Computer science, knowledge & systems
500 Science
500 Science > 520 Astronomy
500 Science > 530 Physics

ISSN:

0004-6361

Publisher:

EDP Sciences

Language:

English

Submitter:

Danielle Zemp

Date Deposited:

08 Apr 2020 11:55

Last Modified:

02 Mar 2023 23:33

Publisher DOI:

10.1051/0004-6361/201834901

ArXiv ID:

1901.07250v1

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.142646

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/142646

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