# A giant impact as the likely origin of different twins in the Kepler-107   exoplanet system

**Authors:** Aldo S. Bonomo, Li Zeng, Mario Damasso, Zo\"e M. Leinhardt, Anders B., Justesen, Eric Lopez, Mikkel N. Lund, Luca Malavolta, Victor Silva Aguirre,, Lars A. Buchhave, Enrico Corsaro, Thomas Denman, Mercedes Lopez-Morales, Sean, M. Mills, Annelies Mortier, Ken Rice, Alessandro Sozzetti, Andrew Vanderburg,, Laura Affer, Torben Arentoft, Mansour Benbakoura, Fran\c{c}ois Bouchy,, J{\o}rgen Christensen-Dalsgaard, Andrew Collier Cameron, Rosario Cosentino,, Courtney D. Dressing, Xavier Dumusque, Pedro Figueira, Aldo F. M. Fiorenzano,, Rafael A. Garc\'ia, Rasmus Handberg, Avet Harutyunyan, John A. Johnson, Hans, Kjeldsen, David W. Latham, Christophe Lovis, Mia S. Lundkvist, Savita Mathur,, Michel Mayor, Giusi Micela, Emilio Molinari, Fatemeh Motalebi, Valerio, Nascimbeni, Chantanelle Nava, Francesco Pepe, David F. Phillips, Giampaolo, Piotto, Ennio Poretti, Dimitar Sasselov, Damien S\'egransan, St\'ephane Udry,, Chris Watson

arXiv: 1902.01316 · 2019-02-05

## TL;DR

This study suggests that a giant impact likely caused the density difference between two similar-sized exoplanets in Kepler-107, indicating impact events can significantly alter planetary compositions.

## Contribution

It provides evidence for giant impacts shaping exoplanet compositions, supported by density measurements and collisional mantle stripping models.

## Key findings

- Kepler-107c is over twice as dense as Kepler-107b.
- Density differences are inconsistent with stellar XUV irradiation effects.
- Giant impact hypothesis explains the observed density and composition differences.

## Abstract

Measures of exoplanet bulk densities indicate that small exoplanets with radius less than 3 Earth radii ($R_\oplus$) range from low-density sub-Neptunes containing volatile elements to higher density rocky planets with Earth-like or iron-rich (Mercury-like) compositions. Such astonishing diversity in observed small exoplanet compositions may be the product of different initial conditions of the planet-formation process and/or different evolutionary paths that altered the planetary properties after formation. Planet evolution may be especially affected by either photoevaporative mass loss induced by high stellar X-ray and extreme ultraviolet (XUV) flux or giant impacts. Although there is some evidence for the former, there are no unambiguous findings so far about the occurrence of giant impacts in an exoplanet system. Here, we characterize the two innermost planets of the compact and near-resonant system Kepler-107. We show that they have nearly identical radii (about $1.5-1.6~R_\oplus$), but the outer planet Kepler-107c is more than twice as dense (about $12.6~\rm g\,cm^{-3}$) as the innermost Kepler-107b (about $5.3~\rm g\,cm^{-3}$). In consequence, Kepler-107c must have a larger iron core fraction than Kepler-107b. This imbalance cannot be explained by the stellar XUV irradiation, which would conversely make the more-irradiated and less-massive planet Kepler-107b denser than Kepler-107c. Instead, the dissimilar densities are consistent with a giant impact event on Kepler-107c that would have stripped off part of its silicate mantle. This hypothesis is supported by theoretical predictions from collisional mantle stripping, which match the mass and radius of Kepler-107c.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.01316