Higher Compact Multiple Occurrence Around Metal-Poor M-Dwarfs and Late K-Dwarfs
Sophie G. Anderson, Jason A. Dittmann, Sarah Ballard, Megan Bedell

TL;DR
This study finds that compact multiple rocky planet systems around low-mass stars are more common around metal-poor stars, suggesting metallicity influences planetary system architecture.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method for estimating metallicities of low-mass stars and demonstrates a significant correlation between metallicity and planetary system architecture.
Findings
Compact multiple systems are more metal-poor (p=0.015, KS test).
Metallicity significantly influences rocky planet system architecture.
Metal-poor stars are more likely to host compact multiple systems.
Abstract
The planet-metallicity correlation serves as a potential link between exoplanet systems as we observe them today and the effects of bulk composition on the planet formation process. Many observers have noted a tendency for Jovian planets to form around stars with higher metallicities; however, there is no consensus on a trend for smaller planets. Here, we investigate the planet-metallicity correlation for rocky planets in single and multi-planet systems around Kepler M-dwarf and late K-dwarf stars. Due to molecular blanketing and the dim nature of these low mass stars, it is difficult to make direct elemental abundance measurements via spectroscopy. We instead use a combination of accurate and uniformly measured parallaxes and photometry to obtain relative metallicities and validate this method with a subsample of spectroscopically determined metallicities. We use the Kolmogorov-Smirnov…
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