Exoplanet Orbital Eccentricities Derived From LAMOST-Kepler Analysis
Ji-Wei Xie (Nanjing), Subo Dong (KIAA-PKU), Zhaohuan Zhu (Princeton, and Nevada), Daniel Huber (Sydney), Zheng Zheng (Utah), P. De Cat (Royal, observatory of Belgium), J.N. Fu (BNU), Hui-Gen Liu (Nanjing), Ali Luo, (NAOC), Yue Wu (NAOC), Haotong Zhang (NAOC), Hui Zhang (Nanjing)

TL;DR
This study uses LAMOST-Kepler data to analyze the eccentricity and inclination distributions of exoplanets, revealing a dichotomy between single and multiple transiting systems and suggesting the Solar System's typicality.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale, homogeneous measurement of exoplanet eccentricities using spectroscopic data, highlighting differences between single and multiple systems.
Findings
Kepler singles have high eccentricities (~0.3).
Kepler multiples are nearly circular (<e>=0.04).
Kepler multiples and Solar System objects share a <e>-<i> relation.
Abstract
The nearly circular (mean eccentricity <e>~0.06) and coplanar (mean mutual inclination <i>~3 deg) orbits of the Solar System planets motivated Kant and Laplace to put forth the hypothesis that planets are formed in disks, which has developed into the widely accepted theory of planet formation. Surprisingly, the first several hundred extrasolar planets (mostly Jovian) discovered using the Radial Velocity (RV) technique are commonly on eccentric orbits (<e> ~ 0.3). This raises a fundamental question: Are the Solar System and its formation special? The Kepler mission has found thousands of transiting planets dominated by sub-Neptunes, but most of their orbital eccentricities remain unknown. By using the precise spectroscopic host star parameters from the LAMOST observations, we measure the eccentricity distributions for a large (698) and homogeneous Kepler planet sample with transit…
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