2008A&A...489L...9H


Query : 2008A&A...489L...9H

2008A&A...489L...9H - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 489, L9-13 (2008/10-2)

TW Hydrae: evidence of stellar spots instead of a Hot Jupiter.

HUELAMO N., FIGUEIRA P., BONFILS X., SANTOS N.C., PEPE F., GILLON M., AZEVEDO R., BARMAN T., FERNANDEZ M., DI FOLCO E., GUENTHER E.W., LOVIS C., MELO C.H.F., QUELOZ D. and UDRY S.

Abstract (from CDS):

TW Hya is a classical T Tauri star that shows significant radial-velocity variations in the optical regime. These variations have been attributed to a 10MJup planet orbiting the star at 0.04AU. The aim of this letter is to confirm the presence of the giant planet around TW Hya by (i) testing whether the observed RV variations can be caused by stellar spots and (ii) analyzing new optical and infrared data to detect the signal of the planet companion. We fitted the RV variations of TW Hya using a cool spot model. In addition, we obtained new high-resolution optical & infrared spectra, together with optical photometry of TW Hya and compared them with previous data. Our model shows that a cold spot covering 7% of the stellar surface and located at a latitude of 54° can reproduce the reported RV variations. The model also predicts a bisector semi-amplitude variation <10m/s, which is less than the errors of the RV measurements discussed in Setiawan et al. (2008Natur.451...38S). The analysis of our new optical RV data, with typical errors of 10m/s, shows a larger RV amplitude that varies depending on the correlation mask used. A slight correlation between the RV variation and the bisector is also observed although not at a very significant level. The infrared H-band RV curve is almost flat, showing a small variation (<35m/s) that is not consistent with the published optical orbit. All these results support the spot scenario rather than the presence of a hot Jupiter. Finally, the photometric data shows a 20% (peak to peak) variability, which is much larger than the 4% variation expected for the modeled cool spot. The fact that the optical data are correlated with the surface of the cross-correlation function points towards hot spots as being responsible for the photometric variability. We conclude that the best explanation for the RV signal observed in TWHya is the presence of a cool stellar spot and not an orbiting hot Jupiter.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): stars: pre-main sequence - stars: planetary systems - stars: individual: TW Hya

Simbad objects: 3

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Number of rows : 3
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 TYC 7208-1066-1 * 11 01 30.4304425751 -34 35 39.962481982   11.02 10.58     ~ 1 0
2 V* TW Hya TT* 11 01 51.9053285064 -34 42 17.033218380   11.94 10.50 10.626 9.18 K6Ve 1892 1
3 HD 108309 PM* 12 26 48.1417421363 -48 54 47.499505755   6.94 6.26     G2V 166 0

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