The Exoplanet Radius Valley from Gas-driven Planet Migration and Breaking of Resonant Chains
Andre Izidoro, Hilke E. Schlichting, Andrea Isella, Rajdeep Dasgupta,, Christian Zimmermann, Bertram Bitsch

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the gas-driven planet migration model, combined with late giant impacts, explains the observed bimodal distribution of exoplanet radii and their compositional diversity, aligning with Kepler data.
Contribution
It shows that the migration model can account for the exoplanet radius valley and compositional differences without requiring exclusively rocky cores.
Findings
The radius valley separates mostly rocky super-Earths from water-ice rich mini-Neptunes.
Migration and chain-breaking explain the period ratios and multiplicity of Kepler planets.
Planets of ~1.4 R⊕ are mostly rocky, while those of ~2.4 R⊕ are water-ice rich.
Abstract
The size frequency distribution of exoplanet radii between 1 and 4 is bimodal with peaks at 1.4 and 2.4 , and a valley at 1.8. This radius valley separates two classes of planets -- usually referred to as "super-Earths" and "mini-Neptunes" -- and its origin remains debated. One model proposes that super-Earths are the outcome of photo-evaporation or core-powered mass-loss stripping the primordial atmospheres of the mini-Neptunes. A contrasting model interprets the radius valley as a dichotomy in the bulk compositions, where super-Earths are rocky planets and mini-Neptunes are water-ice rich worlds. In this work, we test whether the migration model is consistent with the radius valley and how it distinguishes these views. In the migration model, planets migrate towards the disk inner edge forming a chain of planets locked…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
