Stellar abundance of binary stars: their role in determining the formation location of super-Earths and ice giants
Bertram Bitsch, Rebecca Forsberg, Fan Liu, Anders Johansen

TL;DR
This study models how planet formation inside or outside specific ice lines in binary star systems affects stellar atmospheric abundances, providing a potential method to infer planet formation locations and migration pathways.
Contribution
The paper introduces a model linking stellar abundance differences in binary stars to the formation locations of super-Earths and ice giants, offering a new approach to study planet formation.
Findings
Super-Earths inside the water ice line cause larger abundance differences in host stars.
Ice giants inside the CO ice line lead to at least three times larger abundance differences.
Future observations can constrain planet migration pathways based on stellar abundance signatures.
Abstract
Binary stars form from the same parent molecular cloud and thus have the same chemical composition. Forming planets take building material (solids) away from the surrounding protoplanetary disc. Assuming that the disc's accretion onto the star is the main process that clears the disc, the atmosphere of the star will show abundance reductions caused by the material accreted by the forming planet(s). If planets are only forming around one star of a binary system, the planet formation process can result in abundance differences in wide binary stars, if their natal protoplanetary discs do not interact during planet formation. Abundance differences in the atmospheres of wide binaries hosting giant planets have already been observed and linked to the formation location of giant planets. Here, we model how much building material is taken away for super-Earth planets that form inside/outside of…
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