The Occurrence Rate of Earth Analog Planets Orbiting Sunlike Stars
Joseph Catanzarite, Michael Shao (Jet Propulsion Laboratory,, California Institute of Technology)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes Kepler data to estimate that 1-3% of Sun-like stars host Earth analogs, providing crucial insights for future exoplanet imaging missions.
Contribution
It characterizes the period distribution of small exoplanets and estimates the occurrence rate of Earth-like planets around Sun-like stars.
Findings
Estimated 1-3% of Sun-like stars have Earth analogs.
Identified three distinct period regimes for super-Earth and Neptune candidates.
Provided a basis for planning future Earth-like planet imaging missions.
Abstract
Kepler is a space telescope that searches Sun-like stars for planets. Its major goal is to determine {\eta}_Earth, the fraction of Sunlike stars that have planets like Earth. When a planet 'transits' or moves in front of a star, Kepler can measure the concomitant dimming of the starlight. From analysis of the first four months of those measurements for over 150,000 stars, Kepler's science team has determined sizes, surface temperatures, orbit sizes and periods for over a thousand new planet candidates. In this paper, we characterize the period probability distribution function of the super-Earth and Neptune planet candidates with periods up to 132 days, and find three distinct period regimes. For candidates with periods below 3 days the density increases sharply with increasing period; for periods between 3 and 30 days the density rises more gradually with increasing period, and for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
