Silicon and Oxygen Abundances in Planet-Host Stars
Erik Brugamyer, Sarah E. Dodson-Robinson, William D. Cochran, and, Christopher Sneden

TL;DR
This study investigates how silicon and oxygen abundances in stars influence giant planet formation, finding a strong correlation with silicon but not oxygen, supporting the grain nucleation theory in core accretion.
Contribution
It introduces a statistical method to compare silicon and oxygen abundances in planet-hosting and non-host stars, revealing silicon's significant role in planet formation beyond metallicity.
Findings
Planet detection rate depends on silicon abundance.
No correlation found between oxygen abundance and planet detection.
Supports grain nucleation as key in giant planet formation.
Abstract
The positive correlation between planet detection rate and host star iron abundance lends strong support to the core accretion theory of planet formation. However, iron is not the most significant mass contributor to the cores of giant planets. Since giant planet cores are thought to grow from silicate grains with icy mantles, the likelihood of gas giant formation should depend heavily on the oxygen and silicon abundance of the planet formation environment. Here we compare the silicon and oxygen abundances of a set of 76 planet hosts and a control sample of 80 metal-rich stars without any known giant planets. Our new, independent analysis was conducted using high resolution, high signal-to-noise data obtained at McDonald Observatory. Because we do not wish to simply reproduce the known planet-metallicity correlation, we have devised a statistical method for matching the underlying…
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