Stellar clustering shapes the architectures of planetary systems
Andrew J. Winter, J. M. Diederik Kruijssen, Steven N. Longmore,, M\'elanie Chevance

TL;DR
This study shows that the spatial clustering of stars influences the architecture of planetary systems, with significant differences in planetary properties observed between stars in overdense regions and isolated field stars.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence linking stellar clustering in phase space to variations in planetary system architectures, highlighting environmental effects on planet formation and evolution.
Findings
Planets in stellar overdensities have smaller semi-major axes and shorter orbital periods.
Hot Jupiters are predominantly found in stellar phase space overdensities.
Planetary system properties significantly differ between clustered and field stars, even after controlling for stellar age, mass, and metallicity.
Abstract
Planet formation is generally described in terms of a system containing the host star and a protoplanetary disc, of which the internal properties (e.g. mass and metallicity) determine the properties of the resulting planetary system. However, (proto)planetary systems are predicted and observed to be affected by the spatially-clustered stellar formation environment, either through dynamical star-star interactions or external photoevaporation by nearby massive stars. It is challenging to quantify how the architecture of planetary systems is affected by these environmental processes, because stellar groups spatially disperse within <1 billion years, well below the ages of most known exoplanets. Here we identify old, co-moving stellar groups around exoplanet host stars in the astrometric data from the Gaia satellite and demonstrate that the architecture of planetary systems exhibits a…
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