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The origin and maintenance of a retrograde exoplanet

A team of astronomers thinks a companion star and a newly confirmed outer exoplanet could explain a 2008 exoplanet’s “backward” orbit.
By Subaru Telescope Facility, Hilo, Hawaii Published: January 24, 2013
HAT-P-7-system
Artist's rendition of the HAT-P-7 system. Researchers used the Subaru Telescope to discover the retrograde planet (nearest the central star), another giant planet (in the foreground), and a companion star (upper right) in this system. // Credit: NAOJ
Astronomers have used the Subaru Telescope to show that the HAT-P-7 planetary system, which is about 1,040 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus, includes at least two giant planets and one companion star. The discovery of a previously unknown companion HAT-P-7B to the central star HAT-P-7 as well as confirmation of another giant planet HAT-P-7c orbiting outside the retrograde planet HAT-P-7b offers new insights into how retrograde planets may form and endure.

A Japanese collaboration led by Norio Narita from the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan used the Subaru Telescope in 2008 to discover the first evidence of a retrograde orbit of an extrasolar planet HAT-P-7b. Although retrograde planets, which have orbits that run counter to the spin of their central stars, are absent in our solar system, they occur in other planetary systems in the universe. However, scientists did not know how such retrograde planets formed.

Since his team's initial discovery of the retrograde planet HAT-P-7b, Narita has pursued his quest to explain its origin. As participants in the Strategic Exploration of Exoplanets and Disks with the Subaru (SEEDS) Telescope Project, he and his colleagues, Yasuhiro Takahashi, Masayuki Kuzuhara, and Teruyuki Hirano, all from the University of Tokyo, took high-contrast images of the HAT-P-7 system with the High Contrast Instrument for the Subaru Next Generation Adaptive Optics (HiCIAO) to develop a more complete picture of it.

The team first discovered two companion candidates around the HAT-P-7 system in 2009 and measured their proper motion over a three-year period until 2012. They confirmed that one of the two candidates is a common proper motion stellar companion to HAT-P-7, named HAT-P-7B.

The team also confirmed a long-term radial velocity trend for HAT-P-7. This indicated the existence of another giant planet HAT-P-7c orbiting between the orbits of HAT-P-7b, the retrograde planet, and HAT-P-7B, the stellar companion.

The question remained: How did the retrograde orbit of the planet develop? In a 2012 research report, Simon Albrecht pointed out that certain gravitational effects between the central star and HAT-P-7b would prevent the long-term maintenance of its retrograde orbit. The current team thinks that the existence of the companion star HAT-P-7B and the newly confirmed outer planet HAT-P-7c are likely to play an important role in forming and maintaining the retrograde orbit of the inner planet HAT-P-7b via the Kozai mechanism, a long-term process during which a more massive object has an effect on the orbit of another. In the case of HAT-P-7b, the team posited so-called "sequential Kozai migration" as an explanation of this retrograde planet. They suggest that the companion star, HAT-P-7B, first affected the orbit of the newly confirmed outer planet HAT-P-7c through the Kozai mechanism, causing it to tilt. When the orbit of that planet inclined enough, HAT-P7c altered the orbit of the inner planet HAT-P-7b through the Kozai mechanism so that it became retrograde. This sequential orbital evolution of the planet is one of the scenarios that could explain the origin of retrograde/tilted/eccentric planets.

Narita's team has demonstrated the importance of conducting high-contrast direct-imaging observations for known planetary systems to check for the presence of outer faint companions, which may play an important role in understanding the entire picture of planetary migration. The findings provide important clues for understanding the origin of a variety of planetary systems, including those with highly tilted and eccentric orbits.

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3 stars
RICHARD SAUDER JR from PENNSYLVANIA said:
I may have missed it but my question is: How can the rotation direction of a star that is 1040 light years distant be reliably determined?

And how can the orbital direction of any exo-planets be reliably determined?
1 star
UNKNOWN UNKNOWN from QATAR said:
i found this website very interesting as i love learning about our universe
ROBERT L OLDERSHAW from MASSACHUSETTS said:
If astrophysicists could just free their minds from the old Laplacian cloud collapse model for the formation of stellar systems, and recognize the naturalness and usefulness of capture models, then they would be able to explain:

1. Wide binary systems,
2. Hot Jupiter exoplanet systems,
3. Exoplanet systems with retrograde planets,
4. Exoplanet systems with high eccentricity planets,
etc., etc.,

in a simple, and less ad hoc, and less credibility-straining manner.

--- Sumi et al (Nature, 19 May 2011) published solid evidence for trillions of unbound planetary-mass objects roaming throughout our Galaxy.

--- Helmut A. Abt, a highly respected astrophysicist and former editor of the Astrophysical Journal, presented a paper at the most recent AAAS meeting in Alaska that concluded that many exoplanet and multi-star systems MUST be the result of capture processes. It is virtually inevitable mathematically.

Capture/ejection is how atomic systems are known to form/ionize, and Discrete Scale Relativity unequivocally states that the morphology and dynamics of atoms and molecules in highly excited states are exactly self-similar to exoplanet systems and wide binaries, respectively.

The capture model is poised for a major comeback in astrophysics, and this enhances evidence for self-similarity between atomic and stellar systems.

An intellectual revolution is sorely needed in theoretical physics, and has been sorely needed for 40 years!

Robert L. Oldershaw
Discrete Scale Relativity/Fractal Cosmology
http://www3.amherst.edu/~rloldershaw
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