On the Frequency of Gas Giant Planets in the Metal-Poor Regime Alessandro Sozzetti 1, D.W. Latham 2, G. Torres 2, R.P. Stefanik 2, S.G. Korzennik 2, A.P.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Origin & Evolution of Habitable Planets: Astronomical Prospective D.N.C. Lin University of California, Santa Cruz, KIAA, Peking University, with Pathways.
Advertisements

Protoplanetary Disks: The Initial Conditions of Planet Formation Eric Mamajek University of Rochester, Dept. of Physics & Astronomy Astrobio 2010 – Santiago.
Planet Formation Topic: Formation of gas giant planets Lecture by: C.P. Dullemond.
Star & Planet Formation Minicourse, U of T Astronomy Dept. Lecture 5 - Ed Thommes Accretion of Planets Bill Hartmann.
Overview on Extra Solar Planets Rahul I. Patel PHY 599 – Grad Seminar Oct. 18 th 2010.
UCL, 7-8 April 2010 EPRAT Workshop The Gaia Astrometric Survey A. Sozzetti A. Sozzetti INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Torino.
Martin Asplund Galactic archeology & planet formation.
Chapter 15 The Formation of Planetary Systems
STScI May Symposium 2005 Migration Phil Armitage (University of Colorado) Ken Rice (UC Riverside) Dimitri Veras (Colorado)  Migration regimes  Time scale.
Investigating the structure of transiting planets, from hot Jupiters to Kepler super Earths Jonathan Fortney University of California, Santa Cruz Thanks.
Planet Formation with Different Gas Depletion Timescales: Comparing with Observations Huigen Liu, Ji-lin Zhou, Su Wang Dept. of Astronomy.
Detecting the signature of planets at millimeter wavelengths F. Ramos-Stierle, D.H. Hughes, E. L. Chapin (INAOE, Mexico ), G.A. Blake ???
1 Why exoplanets have so high eccentricities - By Line Drube - November 2004.
10Nov2006 Ge/Ay133 More on Jupiter, Neptune, the Kuiper belt, and the early solar system.
Reflection Spectra of Giant Planets With an Eye Towards TPF (and EPIC & ECLIPSE) Jonathan J. Fortney Mark S. Marley NASA Ames Research Center 2005 Aspen.
Ge/Ay133 What have radial velocity surveys told us about (exo)-planetary science?
Ge/Ay133 What have radial velocity surveys told us about (exo)-planetary science?
Stellar Structure Section 6: Introduction to Stellar Evolution Lecture 14 – Main-sequence stellar structure: … mass dependence of energy generation, opacity,
Habitable Planets Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Special Topic.
Exoplanet Transits with mini-SONG Licai NAOC Presented for the NJU group.
Nuno C. Santos Cool Stars 13 - Hamburg, Germany - July2004 Spectroscopic characteristics of planet-host stars and their planets Nuno C. Santos (Observatory.
Ge/Ay133 What have radial velocity surveys told us about (exo)-planetary science?
Eccentric Extrasolar Planets: The Jumping Jupiter Model HD217107b as imagined by Lynette Cook Stacy Teng TERPS Conference Dec. 9, 2004.
M. Shao - 1 SIM Space Interferometry Mission A NASA Origins Mission SIM GRID.
Adam L. Kraus February 1, 2007 Multiple Star Formation at the Bottom of the IMF.
Black Hole in M83 Topic: Black holes Concepts: multi-wavelength observations, black hole evolution Missions: Hubble, Chandra, Swift Coordinated by the.
Origin of the Solar System. Stars spew out 1/2 their mass as gas & dust as they die.
What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva CRAAM/Mackenzie.
Exoplanets Astrobiology Workshop June 29, 2006 Astrobiology Workshop June 29, 2006.
Giant Planet Accretion and Migration : Surviving the Type I Regime Edward Thommes Norm Murray CITA, University of Toronto Edward Thommes Norm Murray CITA,
References: Sozzetti, A., et al. 2007, ApJ, 664, 1190 Mandushev, G., et al. 2007, ApJ, 667, L195 Sozzetti, A., et al. 2007a, ApJ, in preparation Sozzetti,
Young Brown Dwarfs & Giant Planets: Recent Observations and Model Updates By Michael McElwain UCLA Journal Club February 7, 2006.
Exo-planets: ground-based How common are giant planets? What is the distribution of their orbits? –3.6m HARPS: long-term radial velocity monitoring of.
Solar System Formation 4. Outer material accretes to form planetesimals 1. Rotating cloud of gas & dust 2. Cloud spins & flattens, forms a disk 3. Core.
Searches for exoplanets
1 The Precision Radial Velocity Spectrometer Science Case.
The same frequency of planets inside and outside open clusters of stars S. Meibom, G. Torres, F. Fessin et al. Nature 499, 55–58 (04 July 2013)
Jean-Pierre needs to be brought up to date on what’s really going on in astronomy these days!
Investigating the structure of transiting planets, from hot Jupiters to Kepler super Earths Jonathan Fortney University of California, Santa Cruz Thanks.
Modeling Planetary Systems Around Sun-like Stars Paper: Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems: Cold Outer Disks Associated with Sun-like Stars,
Explorations of the Outer Solar System B. Scott Gaudi Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
CoRoT-BrazilPierre BARGE Exoplanet Working Groups CoRoT Brazil Workshop Natal 2004 : oct 29th – nov 2th.
SAIT 2008 – Teramo, 8/5/2008 The Planet-Host Star Connection: Probing Structural and Evolutionary Properties of Exoplanets Alessandro Sozzetti (INAF-OATo,
Korean Astronomical Society Meeting, April 22, 2005 Scott Gaudi Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics & Topics in the Search for Extrasolar Planets.
A STEP Expected Yield of Planets … Survey strategy The CoRoTlux Code Understanding transit survey results Fressin, Guillot, Morello, Pont.
A Dedicated Search for Transiting Extrasolar Planets using a Doppler Survey and Photometric Follow-up A Proposal for NASA's Research Opportunities in Space.
Disk Instability Models: What Works and What Does Not Work Disk Instability Models: What Works and What Does Not Work The Formation of Planetary Systems.
1 Neptune Mass Exoplanets Jeff Valenti M Jupiter / 19 = M Neptune = 17 M Earth Geoff Marcy (Berkeley)Debra Fischer (Yale) Andrew Howard (Berkeley)John.
LMXB in Globular Clusters: Optical Properties Sivakoff et al David Riebel & Justice Bruursema.
Constraints on Extrasolar Planet Populations from VLT NACO/SDI and MMT SDI Direct Imaging Surveys: Giant Planets are Rare at Large Separations (2008 ApJ.
Planets in exotic Locations. Exotic I: Planets around Pulsars.
The Early Stages of Star Formation Leo Blitz UC Berkeley Space, Time and Life – August 26, 2002.
Early science on exoplanets with Gaia A. Mora 1, L.M. Sarro 2, S. Els 3, R. Kohley 1 1 ESA-ESAC Gaia SOC. Madrid. Spain 2 UNED. Artificial Intelligence.
Extrasolar Planets & The Power of the Dark Side David Charbonneau California Institute of Technology Fermilab – 24 April 2002.
Late Work Due 12/20/13 Remember ain’t no butts about it! Sticking your head in the sand won’t make the deadlines go away 11 Days Remain.
Exoplanet Characterization with JWST
X-ray and observational Astronomy Detection limits for close eclipsing and transiting sub- stellar and planetary companions to white dwarfs in the WASP.
 Understand how our view of the solar system has changed over time and how discoveries made have led to our changing our view of the solar system. 
Why do globular clusters have more than one main sequence? Ref: Gratton et al. 2012, A&ARv, 20, 50.
Occultation Studies of the Outer Solar System B. Scott Gaudi (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics)
From Planetesimals to Planets Pre-Galactic Black Holes and ALMA.
2003 UB313: The 10th Planet?. Extra-Solar or Exoplanets Planets around stars other than the Sun Difficult to observe Hundreds discovered (> 2000 so far)
The Birth of Stars and Planets in the Orion Nebula K. Smith (STScI)
Companion Candidates around Transiting Planetary Systems: SEEDS First/Second Year Results Norio Narita (NAOJ) Yasuhiro H. Takahashi (Univ. of Tokyo) and.
Binary Origin of Blue Stragglers Xuefei CHEN Yunnan Observatory, CHINA.
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 15.
Exoplanet Host Stars.
Bell Ringer What is the order of the planets?
Ge/Ay133 What have radial velocity surveys told
Astrobiology Workshop June 29, 2006
Presentation transcript:

On the Frequency of Gas Giant Planets in the Metal-Poor Regime Alessandro Sozzetti 1, D.W. Latham 2, G. Torres 2, R.P. Stefanik 2, S.G. Korzennik 2, A.P. Boss 3, B.W. Carney 4, J.B. Laird 5 (1) INAF/OATo - (2) CfA - (3) CIW - (4) UNC - (5) BGSU

Pisa, 6 May 2009 Core Accretion & Disk Instability * Core Accretion: Bottom-Up! Accumulate a 10 M  core (dust to planetesimals to runaway accretion), which accretes a massive gaseous envelope from the disk. * Disk Instability: Top-Down! Local gravitational collapse of a gaseous portion of the disk leads to a Jupiter-mass (or larger) protoplanet. The rocky core is formed almost simultaneously by sedimentation of dust grains to the center. Boss (SSRv, 2005)

Pisa, 6 May 2009 Ida & Lin (ApJ, 2004), Kornet et al. (A&A, 2006): “The frequency of giant planet formation by core accretion is roughly a linear function of Z” Boss (ApJL, 2002): “The frequency of giant planet formation by disk instability is remarkably insensitive to Z” N/A Do giant planets form by Core Accretion, Disk Instability, or both?

Pisa, 6 May 2009 HST/WFPC2 DSS Globular Cluster 47 Tucanae HST (WFPC2) observed about 34,000 stars in 47 Tuc, obtaining time series photometry over a period of 8.3 days Gilliland et. al. (ApJ 2000), Weldrake et al. (ApJ 2005) 11 Gyr, 10 6 stars [Fe/H] ~ No planet eclipses were seen.

Pisa, 6 May 2009 However… Crowding can impact giant planet formation, migration, and survivalCrowding can impact giant planet formation, migration, and survival The absence of Hot Jupiters in a metal-poor environment does not imply they don’t exist at larger radiiThe absence of Hot Jupiters in a metal-poor environment does not imply they don’t exist at larger radii GCs are not optimal Go to the field

Pisa, 6 May 2009 F p vs [Fe/H] Linear Dependence? Flat tail for [Fe/H] < 0.0? Low statistics for [Fe/H] < -0.5 Santos et al. (A&A, 2004): No P, K, [Fe/H] thresholds: F p ~ Z, for Z > 0.02) F p ~ const, for Z < 0.02 Fischer & Valenti (ApJ, 2005): K > 30 m/s, P 30 m/s, P < 4 yr, -0.5<[Fe/H]<0.5: Quadratic dependence? Flat tail for [Fe/H]<0.0? Low statistics for [Fe/H] < -0.5

Pisa, 6 May 2009 What is the dominant mode of giant planet formation? Is F p ([Fe/H]) bimodal or monotonic? Small-number statistics for [Fe/H] < -0.5 prevents one from drawing conclusions:

Pisa, 6 May 2009 Keck/HIRES Metal-Poor Planet Search 200 stars from the Carney-Latham and Ryan samples200 stars from the Carney-Latham and Ryan samples No close stellar companionsNo close stellar companions Cut-offs: -2.0 < [Fe/H] < -0.6, T eff < 6000 K, V < 12Cut-offs: -2.0 < [Fe/H] < -0.6, T eff < 6000 K, V < 12 Reconnaissance for gas giant planets within 2 AUReconnaissance for gas giant planets within 2 AU Campaign duration: 3 yearsCampaign duration: 3 years Sozzetti et al. (ApJ, 2006)

Pisa, 6 May 2009 The RV dispersion of the full sample peaks at 9 m/s Sozzetti et al. (ApJ, 2006)

Pisa, 6 May 2009 No clear RV trends are seen as a function of T eff, [Fe/H], and ΔT

Pisa, 6 May 2009 Analysis: Methodology Statistical analysis: testing for excess variability (F-test,  2 -test, Kuiper test) Statistical analysis: testing for excess variability (F-test,  2 -test, Kuiper test) Analysis of long-term (linear and curved) trends Analysis of long-term (linear and curved) trends Limits on companion mass and period from detailed simulations Limits on companion mass and period from detailed simulations Upper limits on f p and new powerful constraints on f p ([Fe/H]) in the metal-poor regime Upper limits on f p and new powerful constraints on f p ([Fe/H]) in the metal-poor regime

Pisa, 6 May 2009 About 6% of the stars in the sample have long-period companions Follow-up with direct infrared imaging (MMT/Clio) to determine their nature (low-mass stars or brown dwarfs) RV Variables Follow-up

Pisa, 6 May 2009 MMT/Clio 5 μm ΔM ~ 2.5 mag ΔM ~ 6.5 mag ~0.5” ~1”

Pisa, 6 May 2009 COMPLETENESS: - 6 observations, 3-yr baseline; - s RV = 9 m/s % confidence level - Sensitivity to companions with 1M J 100 m/s), 1M J 100 m/s), with orbital periods between with orbital periods between a few days and 3 years a few days and 3 years - Strong dependence of detection thresholds on eccentricity thresholds on eccentricity WE FIND NONE…

Pisa, 6 May 2009 For n=0, N=160: For n=1, N=160: Frequency of Close-in Companions ( m/s, P 100 m/s, P < 3 yr, e < 0.3)

Pisa, 6 May 2009 Compare with the SPOCS database: b=0.99 b=1.05 b=0.89 ( σ = 134 K) ( σ = 0.12 dex) ( σ = 0.06 M SUN ) Reliability of the Atmospheric Parameters

Pisa, 6 May 2009 Sozzetti et al (ApJ, in press): K > 100 m/s, P 100 m/s, P < 3 yr, -1.0<[Fe/H]<0.5:

Pisa, 6 May 2009 Summary We observe a dearth of gas giant planets (K > 100 m/s) within 2 AU of metal-poor stars (-2.0 < [Fe/H] < -0.6), confirming and extending previous findings The resulting average planet frequency is F p < 0.67% (1σ) F p (-1.0<[Fe/H]<-0.5) appears to be a factor of several lower than F p ([Fe/H]>0.0), but it’s indistinguishable from F p (-0.5<[Fe/H]<0.0). Is F p ([Fe/H]) bimodal or not? It is consistent with being so. However, need larger and better statistics to really discriminate… 1) Expand the sample size; 2) lower the mass sensitivity threshold; 3) search at longer periods. Next generation RV surveys and future high-precision space-borne astrometric observatories (Gaia, SIM-Lite) will help…