The orbital eccentricity of small planet systems
Vincent Van Eylen, Simon Albrecht, Xu Huang, Mariah G. MacDonald,, Rebekah I. Dawson, Maxwell X. Cai, Daniel Foreman-Mackey, Mia S. Lundkvist,, Victor Silva Aguirre, Ignas Snellen, Joshua N. Winn

TL;DR
This study measures and compares the orbital eccentricities of small Kepler planets in single and multi-planet systems, revealing distinct eccentricity distributions that suggest different formation pathways.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed eccentricity measurements for single transiting small planets and demonstrates their different dynamical histories from multi-planet systems.
Findings
Single transiting systems have higher eccentricities than multi-planet systems.
Eccentricity distribution of singles is described by a Gaussian with σ_e ≈ 0.32.
Multi-planet systems have a much lower eccentricity dispersion, σ_e ≈ 0.083.
Abstract
We determine the orbital eccentricities of individual small Kepler planets, through a combination of asteroseismology and transit light-curve analysis. We are able to constrain the eccentricities of 51 systems with a single transiting planet, which supplement our previous measurements of 66 planets in multi-planet systems. Through a Bayesian hierarchical analysis, we find evidence that systems with only one detected transiting planet have a different eccentricity distribution than systems with multiple detected transiting planets. The eccentricity distribution of the single-transiting systems is well described by the positive half of a zero-mean Gaussian distribution with a dispersion , while the multiple-transit systems are consistent with . A mixture model suggests a fraction of of single-transiting…
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