English

Constraining the initial planetary population in the gravitational instability model

Earth and Planetary Astrophysics 2019-07-31 v2

Abstract

Direct imaging (DI) surveys suggest that gas giants beyond 20 AU are rare around FGK stars. However, it is not clear what this means for the formation frequency of Gravitational Instability (GI) protoplanets due to uncertainties in gap opening and migration efficiency. Here we combine state-of-the-art calculations of homogeneous planet contraction with a population synthesis code. We find DI constraints to be satisfied if protoplanet formation by GI occurs in tens of percent of systems if protoplanets `super migrate' to small separations. In contrast, GI may occur in only a few percent of systems if protoplanets remain stranded at wide orbits because their migration is `quenched' by efficient gap opening. We then use the frequency of massive giants in radial velocity surveys inside 5 AU to break this degeneracy - observations recently showed that this population does not correlate with the host star metallicity and is therefore suspected to have formed via GI followed by inward migration. We find that only the super-migration scenario can sufficiently explain this population whilst simultaneously satisfying the DI constraints and producing the right mass spectrum of planets inside 5 AU. If massive gas-giants inside 5 AU formed via GI, then our models imply that migration must be efficient and that the formation of GI protoplanets occurs in at least a tens of percent of systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1907.07584,
  title  = {Constraining the initial planetary population in the gravitational instability model},
  author = {Jack Humphries and Allona Vazan and Mariangela Bonavita and Ravit Helled and Sergei Nayakshin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.07584},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

Accepted to MNRAS

R2 v1 2026-06-23T10:23:20.603Z