The frequency of giant planets around metal-poor stars
A. Mortier, N. C. Santos, A. Sozzetti, M. Mayor, D. Latham, X., Bonfils, and S. Udry

TL;DR
This study investigates the occurrence rate of giant planets around metal-poor stars using radial velocity data, revealing that planet frequency strongly depends on metallicity and is higher than previously estimated.
Contribution
It provides new estimates of giant planet frequencies around metal-poor stars, utilizing detection limits and statistical analysis to refine understanding of planet-metallicity correlation.
Findings
Giant planets are rare around stars with [Fe/H] ≤ -0.7.
Giant planet frequency is about 4.48% around stars with [Fe/H] > -0.7.
Hot Jupiters are less than 1% in metal-poor stars.
Abstract
Context. The discovery of about 700 extrasolar planets, so far, has lead to the first statistics concerning extrasolar planets. The presence of giant planets seems to depend on stellar metallicity and mass. For example, they are more frequent around metal-rich stars,with an exponential increase in planet occurrence rates with metallicity. Aims. We analyzed two samples of metal-poor stars (-2.0 \leq [Fe/H] \leq 0.0) to see if giant planets are indeed rare around these objects. Radial velocity datasets were obtained with two different spectrographs (HARPS and HIRES). Detection limits for these data,expressed in minimum planetary mass and period, are calculated. These produce trustworthy numbers for the planet frequency. Methods. A general Lomb Scargle (GLS) periodogram analysis was used together with a bootstrapping method to produce the detection limits. Planet frequencies were…
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