Thursday, August 28, 2014

Using HD 181068 to Study Multistellar Exoplanet Systems

A multiwavelength study of the hierarchical triple HD 181068: A test bed for studying star-planet-interaction?

Authors:

Czesla et al

Abstract:

HD 181068 is the only compact, triply eclipsing, hierarchical triple system containing a giant star known to date. With its central, highly-active G-type giant orbited by a close pair of main-sequence dwarfs, the system is ideal to study tidal interactions. We carried out a multiwavelength study to characterize the magnetic activity of the HD 181068 system. To this end, we obtained in- and out-of-eclipse X-ray snapshots with XMM-Newton and an optical spectrum, which we analyzed along with the Kepler light-curve. The primary giant shows strong quiescent X-ray emission at a level of 2e31 ergs, an S-index of 0.41 +/- 0.01, and marked white-light flares releasing up to 6e38 erg in the Kepler-band. During the second X-ray observation, we found a three-times elevated -- yet decaying -- level of X-ray emission, which might be due to an X-ray flare. The high level of magnetic activity is compatible with the previously reported absence of solar-like oscillations in the giant, whose atmosphere, however, undergoes tidally-induced oscillations imposed by the changing configuration of the dwarf-binary. We found that the driving force exciting these oscillations is comparable to the disturbances produced by a typical hot Jupiter, making the system a potential test bed to study the effects of tidal interactions also present in planetary systems.

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