The orbital eccentricity distribution of planets orbiting M dwarfs

We investigate the underlying distribution of orbital eccentricities for planets around early-to-mid M dwarf host stars. We employ a sample of 163 planets around early- to mid-M dwarfs across 101 systems detected by NASA's Mission. We constrain the orbital eccentricity for each planet by levera...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2023-06, Vol.120 (23), p.e2217398120-e2217398120
Hauptverfasser: Sagear, Sheila, Ballard, Sarah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We investigate the underlying distribution of orbital eccentricities for planets around early-to-mid M dwarf host stars. We employ a sample of 163 planets around early- to mid-M dwarfs across 101 systems detected by NASA's Mission. We constrain the orbital eccentricity for each planet by leveraging the lightcurve together with a stellar density prior, constructed using metallicity from spectroscopy, magnitude from 2MASS, and stellar parallax from Gaia. Within a Bayesian hierarchical framework, we extract the underlying eccentricity distribution, assuming alternately Rayleigh, half-Gaussian, and Beta functions for both single- and multi-transit systems. We described the eccentricity distribution for apparently single-transiting planetary systems with a Rayleigh distribution with [Formula: see text], and for multitransit systems with [Formula: see text]. The data suggest the possibility of distinct dynamically warmer and cooler subpopulations within the single-transit distribution: The single-transit data prefer a mixture model composed of two distinct Rayleigh distributions with [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] over a single Rayleigh distribution, with 7:1 odds. We contextualize our findings within a planet formation framework, by comparing them to analogous results in the literature for planets orbiting FGK stars. By combining our derived eccentricity distribution with other M dwarf demographic constraints, we estimate the underlying eccentricity distribution for the population of early- to mid-M dwarf planets in the local neighborhood.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2217398120