Evidence that Planets in the Radius Gap Do Not Resemble Their Neighbors
Planets in compact multi-transiting systems tend to exhibit self-similarity with their neighbors, a phenomenon commonly called "peas-in-a-pod". Previous studies have identified that this self-similarity appears independently among super-Earths and sub-Neptunes orbiting the same star. In th...
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Zusammenfassung: | Planets in compact multi-transiting systems tend to exhibit self-similarity
with their neighbors, a phenomenon commonly called "peas-in-a-pod". Previous
studies have identified that this self-similarity appears independently among
super-Earths and sub-Neptunes orbiting the same star. In this study, we
investigate whether the peas-in-a-pod phenomenon holds for planets in the
radius gap between these two categories (located at $\sim$1.8$R_{\oplus}$).
Employing the Kepler sample of planets in multi-transiting systems, we
calculate the radius ratios between radius gap planets and their neighbors. We
find that in systems in possession of a radius gap planet, there is a
statistically significant deficit of planet pairs with radius ratios near
unity, at the level of $3-4\sigma$. We find that neighbors to radius gap
planets actually exhibit reverse size-ordering (that is, a larger inner planet
is followed by an outer smaller planet) more often than they exhibit
self-similarity. We go on to compare whether the period ratios between
neighboring planets also differ, and find that radius gap planets are likelier
to reside in mean motion resonance with neighbors, compared to non-gap planets
(particularly in the 3:2 configuration). We explore the possibility that
systems with a radius gap planet may be modified by a process other than
photoevaporation or core-powered mass loss. The appearance in tandem of unusual
size-ordering of gap planets in multi-planet systems, together with unusual
spacing, furnishes potential supporting evidence in favor of giant impacts
sculpting the radius distribution to some degree. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.02150 |