Searching for the signatures of terrestrial planets in F-, G-type main-sequence stars
J. I. Gonz\'alez Hern\'andez, E. Delgado-Mena, S. G. Sousa, G., Israelian, N. C. Santos, V. Zh. Adibekyan, S. Udry

TL;DR
This study investigates whether chemical abundance ratios in stars can indicate the presence of terrestrial planets, finding no clear evidence linking volatile-to-refractory ratios to rocky planet formation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed differential abundance analysis of stars with and without planets, exploring the relation between chemical patterns and terrestrial planet presence.
Findings
Stars with and without planets show similar abundance ratios.
No significant correlation between abundance ratios and terrestrial planet presence.
Abundance trends are generally flat or slightly negative regardless of planet detection.
Abstract
We have studied the volatile-to-refractory abundance ratios to investigate their possible relation with the low-mass planetary formation. We present a fully differential chemical abundance analysis using high-quality HARPS and UVES spectra of 61 late F- and early G-type main-sequence stars, 29 are planet hosts and 32 are stars without detected planets. As the previous sample of solar analogs, these stars slightly hotter than the Sun also provide very accurate Galactic chemical abundance trends in the metallicity range . Stars with and without planets show similar mean abundance ratios. Moreover, when removing the Galactic chemical evolution effects, these mean abundance ratios, , versus condensation temperature tend to exhibit less steep trends with nearly null or slightly negative slopes. We have also analyzed a sub-sample of 26…
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