Constraints on Extrasolar Planet Populations from VLT NACO/SDI and MMT SDI and Direct Adaptive Optics Imaging Surveys: Giant Planets are Rare at Large Separations
Eric L. Nielsen (1), Laird M. Close (1), Beth A. Biller (1), Elena, Masciadri (2), and Rainer Lenzen (3) ((1) Steward Observatory, University of, Arizona, (2) INAF-Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Italy, (3), Max-Planck-Institut fur Astronomie, Hiedelberg, Germany)

TL;DR
This study uses null results from large direct imaging surveys to place strong statistical constraints on the frequency and distribution of giant exoplanets at large orbital separations, indicating they are rare beyond certain distances.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive statistical limits on the occurrence and distribution of giant planets at wide separations based on combined survey data and Monte Carlo simulations.
Findings
Less than 20% of stars host giant planets (>4 M_Jup) between 20-100 AU.
Giant planets are rare beyond 12-29 AU depending on the assumed distribution.
Null results significantly constrain the possible distributions of wide-separation giant planets.
Abstract
We examine the implications for the distribution of extrasolar planets based on the null results from two of the largest direct imaging surveys published to date. Combining the measured contrast curves from 22 of the stars observed with the VLT NACO adaptive optics system by Masciadri et al. (2005), and 48 of the stars observed with the VLT NACO SDI and MMT SDI devices by Biller et al. (2007) (for a total of 60 unique stars; the median star for our survey is a 30 Myr K2 star at 25 pc), we consider what distributions of planet masses and semi-major axes can be ruled out by these data, based on Monte Carlo simulations of planet populations. We can set this upper limit with 95% confidence: the fraction of stars with planets with semi-major axis from 20 to 100 AU, and mass >4 M_Jup, is 20% or less. Also, with a distribution of planet mass of dN/dM ~ M^-1.16 between 0.5-13 M_Jup, we can rule…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
