Estimating the masses of extra-solar planets
C. A. Watson (1), S.P. Littlefair (2), A. Collier Cameron (3), V. S., Dhillon (2), E. K. Simpson (1) ((1) Queen's University Belfast, (2), University of Sheffield, (3) University of St. Andrews)

TL;DR
This study develops a method to estimate the true masses of exoplanets by determining the inclination angle of their host stars, using stellar rotation data, and applies it to 133 planets, refining their mass estimates.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel approach combining stellar rotation measurements and statistical analysis to accurately determine exoplanet masses, overcoming the limitations of spectroscopic methods.
Findings
Most exoplanets have true masses below the 13 Jupiter mass limit.
The technique confirms high inclinations for transiting systems.
A population of high-mass, low-eccentricity planets suggests different formation mechanisms.
Abstract
All extra-solar planet masses that have been derived spectroscopically are lower limits since the inclination of the orbit to our line-of-sight is unknown except for transiting systems. It is, however, possible to determine the inclination angle, i, between the rotation axis of a star and an observer's line-of-sight from measurements of the projected equatorial velocity (v sin i), the stellar rotation period (P_rot) and the stellar radius (R_star). This allows the removal of the sin i dependency of spectroscopically derived extra-solar planet masses under the assumption that the planetary orbits lie perpendicular to the stellar rotation axis. We have carried out an extensive literature search and present a catalogue of v sin i, P_rot, and R_star estimates for exoplanet host stars. In addition, we have used Hipparcos parallaxes and the Barnes-Evans relationship to further supplement the…
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