High precision abundances in the 16 Cyg binary system: a signature of the rocky core in the giant planet
Marcelo Tucci Maia, Jorge Melendez, Ivan Ramirez

TL;DR
This study precisely compares the chemical compositions of the 16 Cyg binary stars, revealing abundance patterns that suggest the presence of a rocky core in the giant planet orbiting 16 Cyg B.
Contribution
It provides high-precision differential abundance measurements that identify chemical signatures indicative of planet formation, specifically detecting a rocky core in a giant planet.
Findings
Revealed a 0.047 dex metallicity difference between the stars.
Detected a trend in refractory elements consistent with rocky core accretion.
Estimated the planetary core mass to be 1.5-6 Earth masses.
Abstract
We study the stars of the binary system 16 Cygni to determine with high precision their chemical composition. Knowing that the component B has a detected planet of at least 1.5 Jupiter masses, we investigate if there are chemical peculiarities that could be attributed to planet formation around this star. We perform a differential abundance analysis using high resolution (R = 81,000) and high S/N (~700) CFHT/ESPaDOnS spectra of the 16 Cygni stars and the Sun; the latter was obtained from light reflected of asteroids. We determine differential abundances of the binary components relative to the Sun and between components A and B as well. We achieve a precision of about 0.005 dex and a total error ~0.01 dex for most elements. The effective temperatures and surface gravities found for 16 Cyg A and B are Teff = 5830+/-7 K, log g = 4.30+/-0.02 dex, and Teff = 5751+/-6 K, log g = 4.35+/-0.02…
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