Precise radial velocities of giant stars XVI. Planet occurrence rates from the combined analysis of the Lick, EXPRESS, and PPPS giant star surveys
Vera Wolthoff, Sabine Reffert, Andreas Quirrenbach, Mat\'ias I. Jones,, Robert A. Wittenmyer, James S. Jenkins

TL;DR
This study combines data from multiple surveys to accurately determine the occurrence rates of giant planets around evolved stars, revealing dependencies on stellar mass, metallicity, and orbital period, and clarifying effects of stellar evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, homogeneous analysis of giant star surveys, refining planet occurrence rates and their dependence on stellar properties, while accounting for observational biases and stellar noise.
Findings
Positive planet-metallicity correlation confirmed.
Peak occurrence rate at stellar mass 1.68Msun.
Period distribution peaks at 700-800 days.
Abstract
RV surveys of evolved stars allow us to probe a higher stellar mass range compared to main-sequence samples. Differences between the planet populations can be caused by either the differing stellar mass or stellar evolution. To properly disentangle the effects of both, the planet population around giant stars needs to be characterized as accurately as possible. Our goal is to investigate the giant planet occurrence rate around evolved stars and determine its dependence on stellar mass, metallicity, and orbital period. We combine data from the Lick, EXPRESS, and PPPS giant star surveys, yielding a sample of 482 evolved stars and 37 planets. We homogeneously rederived the stellar parameters and accounted for varying observational coverage, precision, and stellar noise properties by computing detection maps via injection and retrieval of synthetic planetary signals. We then computed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Educational Leadership and Practices
