2016ApJ...817...80D


Query : 2016ApJ...817...80D

2016ApJ...817...80D - Astrophys. J., 817, 80 (2016/January-3)

Orbital architectures of planet-hosting binaries. I. Forming five small planets in the truncated disk of Kepler-444A.

DUPUY T.J., KRATTER K.M., KRAUS A.L., ISAACSON H., MANN A.W., IRELAND M.J., HOWARD A.W. and HUBER D.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present the first results from our Keck program investigating the orbital architectures of planet-hosting multiple star systems. Kepler-444 is a metal-poor triple star system that hosts five sub-Earth-sized planets orbiting the primary star (Kepler-444A), as well as a spatially unresolved pair of M dwarfs (Kepler-444BC) at a projected distance of 1".8 (66 AU). We combine our Keck/NIRC2 adaptive optics astrometry with multi-epoch Keck/HIRES RVs of all three stars to determine a precise orbit for the BC pair around A, given their empirically constrained masses. We measure minimal astrometric motion (1.0±0.6 mas/yr, or 0.17±0.10 km/s), but our RVs reveal significant orbital velocity (1.7±0.2 km/s) and acceleration (7.8±0.5 m/s/yr). We determine a highly eccentric stellar orbit (e = 0.864 ± 0.023) that brings the tight M dwarf pair within 5.0 –1.0+0.9 AU of the planetary system. We validate that the system is dynamically stable in its present configuration via n-body simulations. We find that the A-BC orbit and planetary orbits are likely aligned (98%) given that they both have edge-on orbits and misalignment induces precession of the planets out of transit. We conclude that the stars were likely on their current orbits during the epoch of planet formation, truncating the protoplanetary disk at ≈2 AU. This truncated disk would have been severely depleted of solid material from which to form the total ≈1.5 M of planets. We thereby strongly constrain the efficiency of the conversion of dust into planets and suggest that the Kepler-444 system is consistent with models that explain the formation of most close-in Kepler planets in more typical, not truncated, disks.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): astrometry - binaries: close - planetary systems - stars: individual: Kepler-444

Simbad objects: 11

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Number of rows : 11
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 V* GG Tau Or* 04 32 30.3506925552 +17 31 40.494063144 14.84 14.78 13.40 11.54   M0e+M2.0e 736 1
2 V* UY Aur Or* 04 51 47.3890167432 +30 47 13.551561492 12.82 12.96 11.90 10.59 9.52 M0e+M2.5e 359 0
3 * 14 Her PM* 16 10 24.3156759007 +43 49 03.507406809   7.57   6.1   K0V 453 1
4 NAME Barnard's star BY* 17 57 48.4984700685 +04 41 36.113879676 12.497 11.24 9.511 8.298 6.741 M4V 812 2
5 BD+41 3306f Pl 19 19 00.5489000285 +41 38 04.582441681           ~ 34 0
6 BD+41 3306c Pl 19 19 00.5489000285 +41 38 04.582441681           ~ 37 0
7 BD+41 3306d Pl 19 19 00.5489000285 +41 38 04.582441681           ~ 35 0
8 BD+41 3306b Pl 19 19 00.5489000285 +41 38 04.582441681           ~ 41 0
9 BD+41 3306e Pl 19 19 00.5489000285 +41 38 04.582441681           ~ 40 0
10 BD+41 3306 PM* 19 19 00.5489000285 +41 38 04.582441681 10.01 9.67 8.86 8.18 7.66 K0V 287 0
11 * gam Cep SB* 23 39 20.9104133784 +77 37 56.510781384 5.190 4.250   2.6   K1III-IVCN1 598 1

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