The California-Kepler Survey. IV. Metal-rich Stars Host a Greater Diversity of Planets
Erik A. Petigura, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Joshua N. Winn, Lauren M. Weiss,, Benjamin J. Fulton, Andrew W. Howard, Evan Sinukoff, Howard Isaacson, Timothy, D. Morton, and John Asher Johnson

TL;DR
This study investigates how stellar metallicity influences the diversity and occurrence of different types of exoplanets, revealing that higher metallicity correlates with increased occurrence of larger, close-in planets.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of how planet occurrence varies with stellar metallicity across different planet sizes and orbital periods, highlighting a metallicity dependence for certain planet populations.
Findings
Warm super-Earth occurrence is nearly independent of metallicity.
Warm sub-Neptune occurrence doubles with increasing metallicity.
Metallicity correlation strength varies with planet size and orbital period.
Abstract
Probing the connection between a star's metallicity and the presence and properties of any associated planets offers an observational link between conditions during the epoch of planet formation and mature planetary systems. We explore this connection by analyzing the metallicities of Kepler target stars and the subset of stars found to host transiting planets. After correcting for survey incompleteness, we measure planet occurrence: the number of planets per 100 stars with a given metallicity . Planet occurrence correlates with metallicity for some, but not all, planet sizes and orbital periods. For warm super-Earths having days and , planet occurrence is nearly constant over metallicities spanning 0.4 dex to +0.4 dex. We find 20 warm super-Earths per 100 stars, regardless of metallicity. In contrast, the occurrence of warm sub-Neptunes ($R_P =…
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