4.5 Article

Formation and detection of Earth mass planets around low mass stars

Journal

ICARUS
Volume 202, Issue 1, Pages 1-11

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2009.02.035

Keywords

Planetary formation; Earth; Terrestrial planets; Extrasolar planets

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-0449986]
  2. NASA [NNG04GN30G]

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We investigate an in situ formation scenario for Earth-mass terrestrial planets in short-period, potentially habitable orbits around low-mass stars (M-* < 0.3M(circle dot)). We then investigate the feasibility of detecting these Earth-sized planets. We find that such objects can feasibly be detected by a ground-based transit Survey if their formation frequency is high and if correlated noise can be controlled to sub-milli-magnitude levels. Our simulations of terrestrial planet formation follow the growth of planetary embryos in an annular region spanning 0.036 AU <= a <= 0.4 AU around a fiducial M7 (0.12M(circle dot)) primary. Initial distributions of planetary embryos are Calculated using the semi-analytic evolutionary model outlined by Chambers [Chambers, J., 2006. Icarus 180, 496-513]. This model specifies how planetary embryos grow to the stage where the largest embryo masses lie in the 10(24) g <= M-embryo <= 5 x 10(26) g range (corresponding to the close of the so-called oligarchic growth phase). We then model the final phases of terrestrial planet assembly by allowing the embryos to interact with one another via a full N-body integration using the Mercury code. The final planetary system configurations produced in the simulations generally consist of 3-5 planets with masses of order 0.1-1.0M(circle plus) in or near the habitable zone of the star. We explore a range of disk masses (0.2M(circle plus) to 3.3M(circle plus)) to illuminate the role disk mass plays in our results. With a high occurrence fraction or fortunate alignments, transits by the planet formed in our simulations could be marginally detected with modest telescopes of aperture 1 m or smaller around the nearest M-dwarf stars. To obtain a concrete estimate of the delectability of the planets arising in our simulations, we present a detailed Monte-Carlo transit detection Simulation incorporating sky observability, local weather, a target list of around 200 nearby M-dwarfs, and a comprehensive photometric noise model. We adopt a baseline 1.5 mmag level Of Correlated stellar noise sampled from the photometry of the planet-bearing red dwarf GI 436. With this noise model we find that detection of 1R(circle plus) planets around the local M-dwarfs is challenging for a ground-based photometric search, but that detection of planets of larger radius is a distinct possibility. The detection of Earth-sized planets is straightforward, however, with an all-sky survey by a low-cost satellite mission. Given a reduced correlated noise level of 0.45 mmag and an intermediate planetary ice-mass fraction of planets orbiting a target list drawn from the nearest late-type M dwarfs, a ground-based photometric search could detect, on average, 0.3 of these planets within two years and another 0.5 over an indefinitely extended search. A space-based photometric search (similar to the TESS mission) should discover similar to 17 of these Earth-sized planets during its two year-survey, with an assumed Occurrence fraction of 28%. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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