A Hot Uranus Orbiting the Super Metal-rich Star HD 77338 and the Metallicity-Mass Connection

Ivanyuk, O.; Pavlenko, Y. V.; Barnes, J. R.; Jones, M. I.; Hoyer, S.; Murgas, F.; Tuomi, M.; Jones, H. R. A.; Jenkins, J. S.; Pinfield, D. J.; Ruiz, M. T.; Day-Jones, A. C.; Jordán, A.; Rojo, P.
Referencia bibliográfica

The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 766, Issue 2, article id. 67, 14 pp. (2013).

Fecha de publicación:
4
2013
Número de autores
14
Número de autores del IAC
1
Número de citas
39
Número de citas referidas
34
Descripción
We announce the discovery of a low-mass planet orbiting the super metal-rich K0V star HD 77338 as part of our ongoing Calan-Hertfordshire Extrasolar Planet Search. The best-fit planet solution has an orbital period of 5.7361 ± 0.0015 days and with a radial velocity semi-amplitude of only 5.96 ± 1.74 ms–1, we find a minimum mass of 15.9^{+4.7}_{-5.3} M ⊕. The best-fit eccentricity from this solution is 0.09^{+0.25}_{-0.09}, and we find agreement for this data set using a Bayesian analysis and a periodogram analysis. We measure a metallicity for the star of +0.35 ± 0.06 dex, whereas another recent work finds +0.47 ± 0.05 dex. Thus HD 77338b is one of the most metal-rich planet-host stars known and the most metal-rich star hosting a sub-Neptune-mass planet. We searched for a transit signature of HD 77338b but none was detected. We also highlight an emerging trend where metallicity and mass seem to correlate at very low masses, a discovery that would be in agreement with the core accretion model of planet formation. The trend appears to show that for Neptune-mass planets and below, higher masses are preferred when the host star is more metal-rich. Also a lower boundary is apparent in the super metal-rich regime where there are no very low mass planets yet discovered in comparison to the sub-solar metallicity regime. A Monte Carlo analysis shows that this low-mass planet desert is statistically significant with the current sample of 36 planets at the ~4.5σ level. In addition, results from Kepler strengthen the claim for this paucity of the lowest-mass planets in super metal-rich systems. Finally, this discovery adds to the growing population of low-mass planets around low-mass and metal-rich stars and shows that very low mass planets can now be discovered with a relatively small number of data points using stable instrumentation. Based on observations collected at the La Silla Paranal Observatory, ESO (Chile) with the HARPS spectrograph on the ESO 3.6 m telescope, under the program IDs 079.C-0927, 081.C-0148, 087.C-0368, and 088.C-0662.
Proyectos relacionados
Image withthe projects' name
Exoplanetas y Astrobiología

La búsqueda de vida en el Universo se ha visto impulsada por los recientes descubrimientos de planetas alrededor de otras estrellas (los llamados exoplanetas), convirtiéndose en uno de los campos más activos dentro de la Astrofísica moderna. En los últimos años los descubrimientos cada vez más numerosos de nuevos exoplanetas y los últimos avances

Enric
Pallé Bago