Scaling K2. III. Comparable Planet Occurrence in the FGK Samples of Campaign 5 and Kepler

  • Zink J
  • Hardegree-Ullman K
  • Christiansen J
  • et al.
14Citations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Using our K2 Campaign 5 fully automated planet-detection data set (43 planets), which has corresponding measures of completeness and reliability, we infer an underlying planet population model for the FGK dwarf sample (9257 stars). Implementing a broken power law for both the period and radius distributions, we find an overall planet occurrence of planets per star within a period range of 0.5–38 days. Making similar cuts and running a comparable analysis on the Kepler sample (2318 planets; 94,222 stars), we find an overall occurrence of 1.10 ± 0.05 planets per star. Since the Campaign 5 field is nearly 120 angular degrees away from the Kepler field, this occurrence similarity offers evidence that the Kepler sample may provide a good baseline for Galactic inferences. Furthermore, the Kepler stellar sample is metal-rich compared to the K2 Campaign 5 sample, so a finding of occurrence parity may reduce the role of metallicity in planet formation. However, a weak (1.5 σ ) difference, in agreement with metal-driven formation, is found when assuming the Kepler model power laws for the K2 Campaign 5 sample and optimizing only the planet occurrence factor. This weak trend indicates that further investigation of metallicity-dependent occurrence is warranted once a larger sample of uniformly vetted K2 planet candidates is made available.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Zink, J. K., Hardegree-Ullman, K. K., Christiansen, J. L., Petigura, E. A., Dressing, C. D., Schlieder, J. E., … Crossfield, I. J. M. (2020). Scaling K2. III. Comparable Planet Occurrence in the FGK Samples of Campaign 5 and Kepler. The Astronomical Journal, 160(2), 94. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/aba123

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free