ArXiv TLDR

A Uniform Determination of the Bulk Metallicities and Alpha Enrichments of Confirmed Exoplanet Systems with TRES

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2605.11075

Romy Rodríguez Martínez, Emily K. Pass, Phillip A. Cargile, Victoria DiTomasso, David Charbonneau + 2 more

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

A uniform spectroscopic study of 625 exoplanet host stars reveals alpha-enrichment enables giant planet formation in metal-poor environments.

Key contributions

  • Uniformly characterized 625 exoplanet host stars using TRES spectra and uberMS neural network.
  • Discovered subsolar metallicity giant-planet hosts are significantly enhanced in alpha-elements.
  • Suggests alpha-enrichment enables giant planet formation in metal-poor stellar environments.
  • Found modest evidence that alpha-enhanced stars may preferentially host multi-planet systems.

Why it matters

This paper provides a crucial uniform catalog of exoplanet host star properties, enabling diverse astrophysical studies. Its findings on alpha-enrichment in metal-poor giant planet hosts challenge previous assumptions about planet formation, offering new insights into the chemical conditions necessary for planet formation.

Original Abstract

We present a uniform spectroscopic characterization of 625 F, G, and K stars hosting 859 confirmed exoplanets using high-resolution archival optical spectra from the Tillinghast Reflector Echelle Spectrograph (TRES). We use the neural network spectral code uberMS, which combines spectra with broadband photometry to estimate precise and accurate stellar parameters. We determine stellar effective temperatures, surface gravities, radii, luminosities, projected rotational velocities, [Fe/H] abundances, and [$α$/Fe] enrichments for most confirmed planet hosts observed by TRES. This uniform catalog can be used for a broad range of astrophysical studies, particularly to explore links between stellar [$α$/Fe] and a suite of observed exoplanet properties. Combining our metallicity measurements with galactic kinematics, we identify 58 planet hosts that are likely members of the thick disk. We investigate the chemical environments of giant-planet formation by comparing the [$α$/Fe] distributions of giant-planet host stars across different metallicity regimes. We find that subsolar metallicity giant-planet hosts are significantly enhanced in [$α$/Fe] relative to Fe-rich giant-planet hosts and to the average Fe-poor field star, at high statistical significance. This suggests that enhanced $α$-element abundances may partially compensate for low-Fe content and thus enable the formation of giant planets in metal-poor environments. We additionally compare the [$α$/Fe] distributions of single- and multi-planet hosts and find modest evidence that $α$-enhanced stars may preferentially host multi-planet systems. Finally, we recover previously observed trends between stellar metallicity and planetary eccentricity.

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