Detalles de publicación

PP 017121

Elemental Abundances of Kepler Objects of Interest in APOGEE. I. Two Distinct Orbital Period Regimes Inferred from Host Star Iron Abundances

Robert F. Wilson, Johanna Teske, Steven R. Majewski, Katia Cunha, Verne Smith, Diogo Souto, Chad Bender, Suvrath Mahadevan, Nicholas Troup, Carlos Allende Prieto, Keivan G. Stassun, Michael F. Skrutskie, Andrés Almeida, D. A. García-Hernández, Olga Zamora, Jonathan Brinkmann
Several institutions from USA and Europe (including IAC and ULL)
The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) has observed ~600 transiting exoplanets and exoplanet candidates from Kepler (Kepler Objects of Interest, KOIs), most with >18 epochs. The combined multi-epoch spectra are of high signal-to-noise (typically >100) and yield precise stellar parameters and chemical abundances. We first confirm the ability of the APOGEE abundance pipeline, ASPCAP, to derive reliable [Fe/H] and effective temperatures for FGK dwarf stars -- the primary Kepler host stellar type -- by comparing the ASPCAP-derived stellar parameters to those from independent high-resolution spectroscopic characterizations for 221 dwarf stars in the literature. With a sample of 282 close-in (P<100 days) KOIs observed in the APOGEE KOI goal program, we find a correlation between orbital period and host star [Fe/H] characterized by a critical period, Pcrit= 8.3 (+0.1,-4.1) days, below which small exoplanets orbit statistically more metal-enriched host stars. This effect may trace a metallicity dependence of the protoplanetary disk inner-radius at the time of planet formation or may be a result of rocky planet ingestion driven by inward planetary migration. We also consider that this may trace a metallicity dependence of the dust sublimation radius, but find no statistically significant correlation with host Teff and orbital period to support such a claim.

 
Aceptado para publicación en Astronomical Journal | Enviado el 2017-12-05 | Proyecto P/308615