Chemical analysis of early-type stars with planets
C. Saffe, P. Miquelarena, J. Alacoria, M. Flores, M. Jaque Arancibia,, D. Calvo, G. Mart\'in Girardi, M. Grosso, and A. Collado

TL;DR
This study investigates the chemical compositions of early-type stars with and without planets, exploring potential links to planet formation and peculiar chemical patterns like lambda Bootis, through spectral analysis.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed abundance analysis of early-type stars with planets, examining the connection between lambda Bootis patterns and planet presence, and testing formation scenarios.
Findings
Identified lambda Bootis stars with and without planets, including a star with a brown dwarf.
Found no unique chemical pattern for early-type stars with giant planets.
Supported the idea that giant planets may influence stellar surface chemistry during formation.
Abstract
Aims. To explore the chemical pattern of early-type stars with planets, searching for a possible signature of planet formation. In particular, we study a likely relation between the lambda Bootis chemical pattern and the presence of giant planets. Methods. We performed a detailed abundance determination in a sample of early-type stars with and without planets via spectral synthesis. Results. We compared the chemical pattern of the stars in our sample (13 stars with planets and 24 stars without detected planets) with those of lambda Bootis and other chemically peculiar stars. We have found four lambda Bootis stars in our sample, two of which present planets and circumstellar disks (HR 8799 and HD 169142) and one without planets detected (HD 110058). We have also identified the first lambda Bootis star orbited by a brown dwarf (zeta Del). This interesting pair lambda Bootis star + brown…
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