On the frequency of planetary systems around G-dwarfs
Richard J. Parker, Sascha P. Quanz (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)

TL;DR
This study estimates the fraction of G-dwarf stars that can host stable planetary systems, considering binary star properties and primordial binary fractions, revealing that binary fraction assumptions critically influence these estimates.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of how primordial binary fractions affect the potential for stable planetary systems around G-dwarfs, extending previous models to include various binary configurations.
Findings
Up to 63% of G-dwarfs could host Solar System analogues with current binary assumptions.
Higher primordial binary fractions reduce the likelihood of hosting Solar System analogues to 38%.
Between 65-95% of systems can host planets at 1au, decreasing at larger separations.
Abstract
We determine the fraction of G-dwarf stars that could host stable planetary systems based on the observed properties of binaries in the Galactic field, and in various postulated primordial binary populations, which assume that the primordial binary fraction is higher than that in the field. We first consider the frequency of Solar System analogues - planetary systems that form either around a single G-dwarf star, or a binary containing a G-dwarf where the binary separation exceeds 100-300au. If the primordial binary fraction and period distribution is similar to that in the field, then up to 63 per cent of G-dwarf systems could potentially host a Solar System analogue. However, if the primordial binary fraction is higher, the fraction of G-dwarf systems that could host a planetary system like our own is lowered to 38 per cent. We extend our analysis to consider the fraction of G-dwarf…
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