4.7 Article

THE MASS-METALLICITY RELATION FOR GIANT PLANETS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 831, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/0004-637X/831/1/64

Keywords

planets and satellites: composition; planets and satellites: gaseous planets; planets and satellites: interiors; planets and satellites: physical evolution

Funding

  1. NASA XRP grant [NNX16AB49G]
  2. NASA [907851, NNX16AB49G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Exoplanet discoveries of recent years have provided a great deal of new data for studying the bulk compositions of giant planets. Here we identify 47 transiting giant planets (20 M-circle plus < M < 20 M-J) whose stellar insolations are low enough (F-* < 2 x 10(8) erg s(-1) cm(-2), or roughly T-eff < 1000) that they are not affected by the hot-Jupiter radius inflation mechanism(s). We compute a set of new thermal and structural evolution models and use these models in comparison with properties of the 47 transiting planets (mass, radius, age) to determine their heavy element masses. A clear correlation emerges between the planetary heavy element mass M-z and the total planet mass, approximately of the form M-z proportional to root M This finding is consistent with the core-accretion model of planet formation. We also study how stellar metallicity [Fe/H] affects planetary metal-enrichment and find a weaker correlation than has previously been. reported from studies with smaller sample sizes. We confirm a strong relationship between the planetary metal-enrichment relative to the parent star Z(planet)/Z(star) and the planetary mass, but see no relation in Z(planet)/Z(star) with planet orbital properties or stellar mass. The large heavy element masses of many planets (>50 M.) suggest significant amounts of heavy elements in H/He envelopes, rather than cores, such that metal-enriched giant planet atmospheres should be the rule. We also discuss a model of core-accretion planet formation in a one-dimensional disk and show that it agrees well with our derived relation between mass and Z(planet)/Z(star).

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