Chemical evidence for planetary ingestion in a quarter of Sun-like stars
Lorenzo Spina, Parth Sharma, Jorge Mel\'endez, Megan Bedell, Andrew R., Casey, Mar\'ilia Carlos, Elena Franciosini, and Antonella Vallenari

TL;DR
This study provides strong statistical evidence that about 20-35% of Sun-like stars experience planet engulfment events, causing chemical differences in binary systems and influencing planetary system evolution.
Contribution
First large-scale statistical analysis demonstrating planet engulfment as the cause of chemical differences in Sun-like binary stars.
Findings
Planet engulfment occurs in 20-35% of Sun-like stars.
Chemical differences in binaries are linked to planetary ingestion.
Implications for understanding planetary system evolution.
Abstract
Stellar members of binary systems are formed from the same material, therefore they should be chemically identical. However, recent high-precision studies have unveiled chemical differences between the two members of binary pairs composed by Sun-like stars. The very existence of these chemically inhomogeneous binaries represents one of the most contradictory examples in stellar astrophysics and source of tension between theory and observations. It is still unclear whether the abundance variations are the result of chemical inhomogeneities in the protostellar gas clouds or instead if they are due to planet engulfment events occurred after the stellar formation. While the former scenario would undermine the belief that the chemical makeup of a star provides the fossil information of the environment where it formed, a key assumption made by several studies of our Galaxy, the second…
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