Kepler Exoplanet Candidate Host Stars are Preferentially Metal Rich
Kevin C. Schlaufman, Gregory Laughlin

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that Kepler exoplanet host stars, especially those with small-radius planets, tend to be more metal-rich, supporting the core-accretion model of planet formation.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking stellar metallicity to the presence of exoplanets, especially for low-mass stars and small-radius planets, using color-color analysis.
Findings
Giant EC hosts are 4-sigma redder at J-H=0.30, indicating higher metallicity.
Small-radius EC hosts are 4-sigma redder at J-H=0.62, indicating higher metallicity.
Results support the core-accretion model of planet formation.
Abstract
We find that Kepler exoplanet candidate (EC) host stars are preferentially metal-rich, including the low-mass stellar hosts of small-radius ECs. The last observation confirms a tentative hint that there is a correlation between the metallicity of low-mass stars and the presence of low-mass and small-radius exoplanets. In particular, we compare the J-H--g-r color-color distribution of Kepler EC host stars with a control sample of dwarf stars selected from the ~150,000 stars observed during Q1 and Q2 of the Kepler mission but with no detected planets. We find that at J-H = 0.30 characteristic of solar-type stars, the average g-r color of stars that host giant ECs is 4-sigma redder than the average color of the stars in the control sample. At the same time, the average g-r color of solar-type stars that host small-radius ECs is indistinguishable from the average color of the stars in the…
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