Small and Close-In Planets are Uncommon Around A-type Stars
Steven Giacalone, Courtney D. Dressing

TL;DR
This study uses TESS data to estimate the occurrence rates of small, close-in planets around A-type stars, finding they are less common than around cooler stars, with no reliable detections in the sample.
Contribution
First calculation of small, close-in planet occurrence rates around A-type stars using TESS data, establishing upper limits and highlighting their rarity compared to cooler stars.
Findings
No reliable small planets detected around A-type stars.
Upper limits suggest fewer small planets per 1000 A-type stars than around Sun-like stars.
Small, close-in planets are rarer around early-type stars, decreasing faster than hot Jupiters.
Abstract
The Kepler and K2 missions enabled robust calculations of planet occurrence rates around FGKM-type stars. However, these missions observed too few stars with earlier spectral types to tightly constrain the occurrence rates of planets orbiting hotter stars. Using TESS, we calculate the occurrence rate of small (), close-in ( days) planets orbiting A-type stars for the first time. We search a sample of 20,257 bright () A-type stars for transiting planets using a custom pipeline and vet the detected signals, finding no reliable small planets. We characterize the pipeline completeness using injection/recovery tests and determine the upper limits of the occurrence rates of close-in sub-Saturns (), sub-Neptunes (), and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Exploration and Technology · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
