The Epoch of Giant Planet Migration Planet Search Program. III. The Occurrence Rate of Young Giant Planets Inside the Water Ice Line
Quang H. Tran, Brendan P. Bowler, William D. Cochran, Chad F. Bender, Samuel Halverson, Suvrath Mahadevan, Joe P. Ninan, Paul Robertson, Arpita Roy, Gu{\dh}mundur Stef\'ansson, Ryan C. Terrien

TL;DR
This study measures the occurrence rate of young giant planets inside the water ice line, finding it lower than older stars and suggesting that giant planets increase in prevalence over time due to formation and migration processes.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical measurement of young giant planet occurrence inside the water ice line, revealing a lower rate than in older stars and constraining migration theories.
Findings
Occurrence rate of 1.9% for giant planets inside 2.5 AU in young stars.
Results favor an increase in giant planet prevalence from 100 Myr to Gyr ages.
Decaying occurrence rate is strongly excluded, indicating stable or increasing prevalence over time.
Abstract
We present statistical results from the Epoch of Giant Planet Migration RV planet search program. This survey was designed to measure the occurrence rate of giant planets interior to the water ice line of young Sun-like stars, compare this to the prevalence of giant planets at older ages, and provide constraints on the timescale and dominant inward migration mechanism of giant planets. Our final sample amounts to 85 single young (20-200 Myr) G and K dwarfs which we target across a 4-year time baseline with the near-infrared Habitable-zone Planet Finder spectrograph at McDonald Observatory's Hobby-Eberly Telescope. As part of this survey, we discovered the young hot Jupiter HS Psc b. We characterize survey detection completeness with realistic injection-recovery tests and measure an occurrence rate of % for intermediate-age giant planets (…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
