No evidence for a metallicity-dependent enhancement of distant giant companions to close-in small planets in the California Legacy Survey
Judah Van Zandt, Erik Petigura

TL;DR
This study investigates the correlation between close-in small planets and distant giant companions, finding no evidence of metallicity-dependent enhancement in the California Legacy Survey, contrasting prior results.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis that challenges previous findings of metallicity-dependent giant planet prevalence around small planet hosts.
Findings
No significant enhancement of distant giants in metal-rich systems in the California Legacy Survey
Discrepancy observed between this study and prior research regarding metallicity effects
Highlights the importance of large, homogeneous samples for exoplanet correlation studies
Abstract
Understanding the relationship between close-in small planets (CS) and distant giants (DG) is central to understanding the formation of planetary systems like our own. Most studies of this connection have found evidence for a positive correlation, though significant statistical and systematic uncertainties remain due to differences in sample size, target selection bias, and even the definitions of `close-in small' and `distant giant' planets. Recently, Bryan & Lee (2024) conducted a study of 184 stars hosting super-Earths ( or ) to determine the effect of stellar metallicity on the prevalence of distant giant companions (, AU). They found that such giants are twice as common in the presence of inner planets, but \textit{only} in metal-rich systems: P(DG|CS, [Fe/H]>0) = vs.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
