Exploring the realm of scaled Solar System analogs with HARPS
D. Barbato, A. Sozzetti, S. Desidera, M. Damasso, A. S. Bonomo, P., Giacobbe, L. S. Colombo, C. Lazzoni, R. Claudi, R. Gratton, G. LoCurto, F., Marzari, and C. Mordasini

TL;DR
This study uses high-precision HARPS data to search for inner low-mass planets in systems with outer giant planets, estimating a low occurrence rate of such Solar System analogs and highlighting the importance of high-cadence observations.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the frequency of scaled Solar System analogs and refines orbital parameters of known planets using combined HARPS and literature data.
Findings
No additional inner planets detected in the sample.
Evidence found for long-period massive companions in two systems.
Estimated upper limit for inner low-mass planets is less than 9.84%.
Abstract
The assessment of the frequency of planetary systems reproducing the Solar System's architecture is still an open problem. Detailed study of multiplicity and architecture is generally hampered by limitations in quality, temporal extension and observing strategy, causing difficulties in detecting low-mass inner planets in the presence of outer giant planetary bodies. We present the results of high-cadence and high-precision HARPS observations on 20 solar-type stars known to host a single long-period giant planet in order to search for additional inner companions and estimate the occurence rate of scaled Solar System analogs, i.e. systems featuring lower-mass inner planets in the presence of long-period giant planets. We carry out combined fits of our HARPS data with literature radial velocities using differential evolution MCMC to refine the literature orbital solutions and…
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