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The Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey: Giant Planet and Brown Dwarf Demographics from 10 to 100 au

Authors :
Nielsen, EL
De Rosa, RJ
Macintosh, B
Wang, JJ
Ruffio, JB
Chiang, E
Marley, MS
Saumon, D
Savransky, D
Mark Ammons, S
Bailey, VP
Barman, T
Blain, C
Bulger, J
Burrows, A
Chilcote, J
Cotten, T
Czekala, I
Doyon, R
Duchene, G
Esposito, TM
Fabrycky, D
Fitzgerald, MP
Follette, KB
Fortney, JJ
Gerard, BL
Goodsell, SJ
Graham
Greenbaum, AZ
Hibon, P
Hinkley, S
Hirsch, LA
Hom, J
Hung, LW
Ilene Dawson, R
Ingraham, P
Kalas, P
Konopacky, Q
Larkin, JE
Lee, EJ
Lin, JW
Maire, J
Marchis, F
Marois, C
Metchev, S
Millar-Blanchaer, MA
Morzinski, KM
Oppenheimer, R
Palmer, D
Patience, J
Perrin, M
Poyneer, L
Pueyo, L
Rafikov, RR
Rajan, A
Rameau, J
Rantakyrö, FT
Ren, B
Schneider, AC
Sivaramakrishnan, A
Song, I
Soummer, R
Tallis, M
Thomas, S
Ward-Duong, K
Wolff, S
Publisher :
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository

Abstract

We present a statistical analysis of the first 300 stars observed by the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey (GPIES). This subsample includes six detected planets and three brown dwarfs; from these detections and our contrast curves we infer the underlying distributions of substellar companions with respect to their mass, semi-major axis, and host stellar mass. We uncover a strong correlation between planet occurrence rate and host star mass, with stars M $>$ 1.5 $M_\odot$ more likely to host planets with masses between 2-13 M$_{\rm Jup}$ and semi-major axes of 3-100 au at 99.92% confidence. We fit a double power-law model in planet mass (m) and semi-major axis (a) for planet populations around high-mass stars (M $>$ 1.5M$_\odot$) of the form $\frac{d^2 N}{dm da} \propto m^\alpha a^\beta$, finding $\alpha$ = -2.4 $\pm$ 0.8 and $\beta$ = -2.0 $\pm$ 0.5, and an integrated occurrence rate of $9^{+5}_{-4}$% between 5-13 M$_{\rm Jup}$ and 10-100 au. A significantly lower occurrence rate is obtained for brown dwarfs around all stars, with 0.8$^{+0.8}_{-0.5}$% of stars hosting a brown dwarf companion between 13-80 M$_{\rm Jup}$ and 10-100 au. Brown dwarfs also appear to be distributed differently in mass and semi-major axis compared to giant planets; whereas giant planets follow a bottom-heavy mass distribution and favor smaller semi-major axes, brown dwarfs exhibit just the opposite behaviors. Comparing to studies of short-period giant planets from the RV method, our results are consistent with a peak in occurrence of giant planets between ~1-10 au. We discuss how these trends, including the preference of giant planets for high-mass host stars, point to formation of giant planets by core/pebble accretion, and formation of brown dwarfs by gravitational instability.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........076c075140e8c8854cfa0972866512a1