Architectures of Exoplanetary Systems. IV: A Multi-planet Model for Reproducing the Radius Valley and Intra-system Size Similarity of Planets around Kepler's FGK Dwarfs
Matthias Y. He, Eric B. Ford

TL;DR
This paper introduces a hybrid multi-planet model that successfully reproduces the Kepler-observed radius valley and intra-system size similarity, highlighting the role of initial mass clustering and photoevaporation in shaping planetary systems.
Contribution
It presents the first multi-planet model that simultaneously explains the radius valley and intra-system size similarity in Kepler's exoplanet data, integrating AMD stability and photoevaporation effects.
Findings
Deepest radius valleys linked to initial planet radii around 2.1 R⊕
Intra-system size similarity explained by primordial mass clustering
Occurrence rates of Earth-like planets decrease in the hybrid model
Abstract
The Kepler-observed distribution of planet sizes have revealed two distinct patterns: (1) a radius valley separating super-Earths and sub-Neptunes and (2) a preference for intra-system size similarity. We present a new model for the exoplanet population observed by Kepler, which is a "hybrid" of a clustered multi-planet model in which the orbital architectures are set by the angular momentum deficit (AMD) stability (He et al. 2020; arXiv:2007.14473) and a joint mass-radius-period model involving envelope mass-loss driven by photoevaporation (Neil & Rogers 2020; arXiv:1911.03582). We find that the models that produce the deepest radius valleys have a primordial population of planets with initial radii peaking at , which is subsequently sculpted by photoevaporation into a bimodal distribution of final planet radii. The hybrid model requires strongly clustered initial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
