Age analysis of extrasolar planets: Insight from stellar isochrone models
C. Swastik, Ravinder K. Banyal, Mayank Narang, Athira Unni, and T., Sivarani

TL;DR
This study analyzes the ages of 2336 exoplanet host stars using three isochrone models, revealing that many hosts are younger than the Sun, with giant planet hosts being notably younger, especially for hot Jupiters, indicating recent planet formation activity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive age analysis of exoplanet hosts using multiple isochrone models, highlighting the youth of giant planet systems and the potential link to galactic chemical evolution.
Findings
50-70% of stars with planets are younger than the Sun
Giant planet hosts are younger than small planet hosts
Hot Jupiters are associated with the youngest stellar hosts
Abstract
There is growing evidence from stellar kinematics and galactic chemical evolution (GCE) suggesting that giant planets (M0.3) are relatively young compared to the most commonly occurring population of small planets (M0.3). To further test the validity of these results, we analyzed the ages for a large number of 2336 exoplanet hosting stars determined using three different but well-established isochrone fitting models, namely, PARSEC, MIST, and Yonsei Yale (YY). As input parameters, we used Gaia DR3 parallaxes, magnitudes, and photometric temperature, as well as spectroscopically determined more accurate temperatures and metallicities from the Sweet Catalog. Our analysis suggests that ~50 to 70 of stars with planets are younger than the sun. We also find that, among the confirmed exoplanetary systems, stars hosting giant planets are even…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
