Sub-stellar Companions of Intermediate-mass Stars with CoRoT: CoRoT-34b, CoRoT-35b, and CoRoT-36b
D. Sebastian, E.W. Guenther, M. Deleuil, M. Dorsch, U. Heber, C., Heuser, D. Gandolfi, S. Grziwa, H.J. Deeg, R. Alonso, F. Bouchy, Sz., Csizmadia, F. Cusano, M. Fridlund, S. Geier, A. Irrgang, J. Korth, D., Nespral, H. Rauer, L. Tal-Or

TL;DR
This study uses CoRoT data to estimate the frequency of close-in giant planets around intermediate-mass stars, finding it significantly lower than around solar-mass stars, and reports the discovery of a brown dwarf and two giant planets.
Contribution
First measurement of close-in giant planet frequency around intermediate-mass stars using CoRoT survey data, including new planet and brown dwarf discoveries.
Findings
0.12% of IMSs host close-in giant planets
Frequency lower than that of solar-mass stars
Discovery of CoRoT-34b, CoRoT-35b, and CoRoT-36b
Abstract
Theories of planet formation give contradicting results of how frequent close-in giant planets of intermediate mass stars (IMSs; ) are. Some theories predict a high rate of IMSs with close-in gas giants, while others predict a very low rate. Thus, determining the frequency of close-in giant planets of IMSs is an important test for theories of planet formation. We use the CoRoT survey to determine the absolute frequency of IMSs that harbour at least one close-in giant planet and compare it to that of solar-like stars. The CoRoT transit survey is ideal for this purpose, because of its completeness for gas-giant planets with orbital periods of less than 10 days and its large sample of main-sequence IMSs. We present a high precision radial velocity follow-up programme and conclude on 17 promising transit candidates of IMSs, observed with CoRoT.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
