Planet formation around stars of various masses: Hot super-earths
Loading...
Date
Authors
Kennedy, Grant
Kenyon, Scott J
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Abstract
We consider trends resulting from two formation mechanisms for short-period super-Earths: planet-planet scattering and migration. We model scenarios where these planets originate near the snow line in "cold-finger" circumstellar disks. Low-mass planet-planet scattering excites planets to low-periastron orbits only for lower mass stars. With long circularization times, these planets reside on long-period eccentric orbits. Closer formation regions mean planets that reach short-period orbits by migration are most common around low-mass stars. Above ∼1 M⊙, planets massive enough to migrate to close-in orbits before the gas disk dissipates are above the critical mass for gas giant formation. Thus, there is an upper stellar mass limit for short-period super-Earths that form by migration. If disk masses are distributed as a power law, planet frequency increases with metallicity because most disks have low masses. For disk masses distributed around a relatively high mass, planet frequency decreases with increasing metallicity. As icy planets migrate, they shepherd interior objects toward the star, which grow to ∼1 M⊕. In contrast to icy migrators, surviving shepherded planets are rocky. On reaching short-period orbits, planets are subject to evaporation processes. The closest planets may be reduced to rocky or icy cores. Low-mass stars have lower EUV luminosities, so the level of evaporation decreases with decreasing stellar mass.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Astrophysical Journal, The
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
2037-12-31