
TL;DR
Planetary population synthesis is a developing method that models planet formation and evolution, tested against observational data, providing insights into planetary system characteristics and guiding future research in exoplanet studies.
Contribution
This review introduces the planetary population synthesis technique, detailing its components, models, and recent results, highlighting its role in understanding exoplanet demographics.
Findings
Distribution of planetary masses and radii matches observations
Predicted planet orbital distributions align with known exoplanet data
Model forecasts inform future observational strategies
Abstract
In stellar astrophysics, the technique of population synthesis has been successfully used for several decades. For planets, it is in contrast still a young method which only became important in recent years because of the rapid increase of the number of known extrasolar planets, and the associated growth of statistical observational constraints. With planetary population synthesis, the theory of planet formation and evolution can be put to the test against these constraints. In this review of planetary population synthesis, we first briefly list key observational constraints. Then, the work flow in the method and its two main components are presented, namely global end-to-end models that predict planetary system properties directly from protoplanetary disk properties and probability distributions for these initial conditions. An overview of various population synthesis models in the…
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