The New Generation Planetary Population Synthesis (NGPPS). IV. Planetary systems around low-mass stars

Auteurs : Remo Burn, Martin Schlecker, Christoph Mordasini, Alexandre Emsenhuber, Yann Alibert, Thomas Henning, Hubert Klahr, Willy Benz

A&A 656, A72 (2021)
arXiv: 2105.04596v2 - DOI (astro-ph.EP)
Updated references, corrected inverted colorbar in Fig. 1. Data available on dace.unige.ch -> Formation & evolution

Résumé : Previous work concerning planet formation around low-mass stars has often been limited to large planets and individual systems. As current surveys routinely detect planets down to terrestrial size in these systems, a more holistic approach that reflects their diverse architectures is timely. Here, we investigate planet formation around low-mass stars and identify differences in the statistical distribution of planets. We compare the synthetic planet populations to observed exoplanets. We used the Generation III Bern model of planet formation and evolution to calculate synthetic populations varying the central star from solar-like stars to ultra-late M dwarfs. This model includes planetary migration, N-body interactions between embryos, accretion of planetesimals and gas, and long-term contraction and loss of the gaseous atmospheres. We find that temperate, Earth-sized planets are most frequent around early M dwarfs and more rare for solar-type stars and late M dwarfs. The planetary mass distribution does not linearly scale with the disk mass. The reason is the emergence of giant planets for M*>0.5 Msol, which leads to the ejection of smaller planets. For M*>0.3 Msol there is sufficient mass in the majority of systems to form Earth-like planets, leading to a similar amount of Exo-Earths going from M to G dwarfs. In contrast, the number of super-Earths and larger planets increases monotonically with stellar mass. We further identify a regime of disk parameters that reproduces observed M-dwarf systems such as TRAPPIST-1. However, giant planets around late M dwarfs such as GJ 3512b only form when type I migration is substantially reduced. We quantify the stellar mass dependence of multi-planet systems using global simulations of planet formation and evolution. The results compare well to current observational data and predicts trends that can be tested with future observations.

Soumis à arXiv le 10 Mai. 2021

Explorez l'arbre d'article

Cliquez sur les nœuds de l'arborescence pour être redirigé vers un article donné et accéder à leurs résumés et assistant virtuel

Accédez également à nos Résumés, ou posez des questions sur cet article à notre Assistant IA.

Recherchez des articles similaires (en version bêta)

En cliquant sur le bouton ci-dessus, notre algorithme analysera tous les articles de notre base de données pour trouver le plus proche en fonction du contenu des articles complets et pas seulement des métadonnées. Veuillez noter que cela ne fonctionne que pour les articles pour lesquels nous avons généré des résumés et que vous pouvez le réexécuter de temps en temps pour obtenir un résultat plus précis pendant que notre base de données s'agrandit.