Jupiter Analogues Orbit Stars with an Average Metallicity Close to that of the Sun
Lars A. Buchhave, Bertram Bitsch, Anders Johansen, David W. Latham,, Martin Bizzarro, Allyson Bieryla, David M. Kipping

TL;DR
This study shows that stars hosting Jupiter analogues have near-solar metallicity, unlike hot-Jupiters and eccentric cool Jupiters which prefer metal-rich stars, suggesting different formation environments.
Contribution
The paper provides observational evidence and numerical simulations linking stellar metallicity to the formation and orbital characteristics of Jupiter-like exoplanets.
Findings
Jupiter analogues orbit stars with near-solar metallicity.
Hot-Jupiters and eccentric cool Jupiters are found around metal-rich stars.
Eccentricity of Jupiter analogues increases with host star metallicity.
Abstract
Jupiter played an important role in determining the structure and configuration of the Solar System. Whereas hot-Jupiter type exoplanets preferentially form around metal-rich stars, the conditions required for the formation of planets with masses, orbits and eccentricities comparable to Jupiter (Jupiter analogues) are unknown. Using spectroscopic metallicities, we show that stars hosting Jupiter analogues have an average metallicity close to solar, in contrast to their hot-Jupiter and eccentric cool Jupiter counterparts, which orbit stars with super-solar metallicities. Furthermore, the eccentricities of Jupiter analogues increase with host star metallicity, suggesting that planet-planet scatterings producing highly eccentric cool Jupiters could be more common in metal-rich environments. To investigate a possible explanation for these metallicity trends, we compare the observations to…
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