Does the presence of planets affect the frequency and properties of extrasolar kuiper belts? Results from the Hershel Drebis and Dunes Surveys
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2015Metadata
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Moro Martín, A.
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Does the presence of planets affect the frequency and properties of extrasolar kuiper belts? Results from the Hershel Drebis and Dunes Surveys
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Abstract
The study of the planet–debris disk connection can shed light on the formation and evolution of planetary
systemsand may help “predict” the presence of planets around stars with certain disk characteristics. In
preliminary analyses of subsamples of the Herschel DEBRIS and DUNES surveys, Wyatt et al. and Marshall et al.
identified a tentative correlation between debris and the presence of low-mass planets. Here we use the cleanest
possible sample out of these Herschel surveys to assess the presence of such a correlation, discarding stars without
known ages, with ages <1 Gyr, and with binary companions <100 AUto rule out possible correlations due to
effects other than planet presence. In our resulting subsample of 204 FGK stars, we do not find evidence that debris
disks are more common or more dusty around stars harboring high-mass or low-mass planets compared to a control
sample without identified planets. There is no evidence either that the characteristic dust temperature of the debris
disks around planet-bearing stars is any different from that in debris disks without identified planets, nor that debris
disks are more or less common (or more or less dusty) around stars harboring multiple planets compared to singleplanet
systems. Diverse dynamical histories may account for the lack of correlations. The data show a correlation
between the presence of high-mass planets and stellar metallicity, but no correlation between the presence of lowmass
planets or debris and stellar metallicity. Comparing the observed cumulative distribution of fractional
luminosity to those expected from a Gaussian distribution in logarithmic scale, we find that a distribution centered
on the solar system’s value fits the data well, while one centered at 10 times this value can be rejected. This is of
interest in the context of future terrestrial planet detection and characterization because it indicates that there are
good prospects for finding a large number of debris disk systems (i.e., with evidence of harboring planetesimals,
the building blocks of planets) with exozodiacal emission low enough to be appropriate targets for an ATLASTtype
mission to search for biosignatures.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/132494
DOI: DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/801/2/143
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The Astrophysical Journal, 801:143 (28pp), 2015 March 10
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