Showing posts with label known space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label known space. Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2017

2016: Backyard Bonanza



Figure 1. A snapshot of 79 exoplanetary systems located within 20 parsecs (65 light years), arranged by increasing distance from our Sun. Names in red mark planets added to the census in 2016. Spectral types are indicated by the color key at lower right. The inner circle has a radius of 5 parsecs, and each successive ring represents an increment of 5 parsecs. Stellar icons are arranged in 2 dimensions by right ascension, which is marked at the edge of the outer circle; declination is ignored. Note that this diagram shows the relative distance of planetary systems from our Sun, but not from each other.


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Without doubt, the biggest exoplanetary news of 2016 was the announcement of a small planet orbiting Proxima Centauri, a dim red star that happens to be our Sun’s closest neighbor. Not only did this story dominate headlines in the popular media: a recent query of the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System returned a total of 28 scientific articles about Proxima Centauri (including the discovery paper) either published or in press over the past 5 months. My blog post on the detection (The Perils of Proxima) was the biggest click magnet for Back Alley Astronomy in 2016.

No other discovery, analysis, or commentary in the field of exoplanetary astronomy rivaled the news from Proxima. Given the imbalance, it would be a stretch to concoct a “Top Ten” list of extrasolar news for the year just ended. So I’ll content myself with a Top Five: 1) the announcement of Proxima Centauri b by Guillem Anglada-Escudé & colleagues (blogged here), 2) the radial velocity detection of a sixth planet in the well-known Kepler-20 system by Lars Buchhave & colleagues (blogged here), 3) the final data dump of the Kepler Mission, which added 1,284 mostly lonely planets to the extrasolar census in one fell swoop (blogged here), 4) the return of Rho Coronae Borealis b, one of the first exoplanets ever announced, which was widely rejected as a bona fide planet a few years ago and then restored to consensual reality by Benjamin Fulton & colleagues, and 5) the discovery by Michael Endl & colleagues of a new Jupiter analog, HD 95872 b, which like Proxima Centauri b is located right in the Sun’s back yard (announced in a preprint late in 2015 but not formally published – or noticed by me – until 2016). Since I haven’t yet written about the last two items, I’ll devote some words to these less heralded new arrivals, and then assess the message their discoveries might be telling us about our immediate Galactic neighborhood.

the newest, nearest Jupiter analog

HD 95872 b is a gas giant planet in a more or less circular orbit whose estimated period of 4375 days falls within 1% of the orbital period of Jupiter. It was reported along with another cool gas giant – the latter following a notably eccentric orbit around a somewhat more distant star, Psi Draconis – by Endl et al. (2016).

The host star, HD 95872, is located just 25 light years away (7.56 parsecs) in the constellation of Crater the Wine Bowl. By any definition, it is a Sun-like star, included in the respectable Henry Draper Catalog and assigned a spectral type of K0 V in the SIMBAD database. However, Endl’s group reports a few stellar oddities. First, this object was omitted from the Hipparcos Catalog of nearby stars, from which most targets monitored by radial velocity searches have been drawn. The omission means that HD 95872 did not receive a precise distance estimate during the Hipparcos mission, a factor noted without comment by Endl & colleagues. Second, the star’s assigned spectral type seems rather late (i.e., reddish) for the mass of 0.95 ±0.4 Solar (0.95 ±0.4 Msol) determined by Endl’s group. For context, Kepler-20 has a virtually identical mass, but its spectral type is G2. Third, at an estimated age of 10 billion years, a star near Solar mass is likely to be evolving into a subgiant – an expectation contradicted by the classification of HD 95872 as a main sequence star by SIMBAD as well as Endl’s group.

HD 95872 bears a notable resemblance to 55 Cancri, another nearby star that also happens to host a gas giant in an orbit similar to Jupiter’s. Both the mass (0.90 ±0.015 Msol) and the age (10.2 billion years) of 55 Cancri are similar to those of HD 95872, and both stars are also significantly enriched in metals. According to von Braun & colleagues (2011), the metallicity of 55 Cancri is +0.31, while Endl & colleagues report +0.41 for HD 95872. Given these similarities, it’s illuminating to remember that the spectral classification of 55 Cancri is subject to disagreement, with published types ranging from G8 V to K0 IV. (Note that alternative values of 3-9 billion years are available for the age of 55 Cancri; see Teske et al. 2013.)

As substantial research has shown, metal-rich stars like 55 Cancri and HD 95872 have a high likelihood of supporting gas giant planets. 55 Cancri hosts two: planet b with an orbital radius of 0.11 astronomical units (AU) and a minimum mass 0.83 times Jupiter (0.83 Mjup), and planet d with an orbital radius of 5.76 AU and a minimum mass of 3.84 Mjup. 55 Cancri also hosts two tweens (objects intermediate in mass between Neptune and Saturn) in the gap between planets b and d, plus a dense, highly irradiated Super Earth interior to planet b with a mass of about 8 Earth units (8 Mea) and an orbital period shorter than 24 hours. These massive progeny illustrate the superior planet-forming potential of metal-rich protoplanetary disks.

Our new friend, HD 95872, has only a single reported planet, for which Endl & colleagues provide a minimum mass of 4.6 Mjup. This is similar to the estimate for 55 Cancri d, but well above the median for the full census of gas giants. For orbital period and semimajor axis, Endl’s group reports values almost identical to those of Jupiter: respectively 4375 days and 5.2 AU. In addition, they find a relatively circular orbit, although their results for eccentricity are understandably imprecise: 0.06 ±0.04. Within uncertainties, this value is consistent with the well-measured eccentricity of Jupiter: 0.048.

Endl & colleagues confidently identify both HD 95872 b and their other new planet, Psi Draconis b, as Jupiter analogs. They define such planets as “within a factor of a few Jupiter-masses and in orbits longer than 8 years.” As explained in a previous post (Almost Jupiter), I find this definition incomplete, since I’m more interested in analogs of our Solar System than in cool gas giants per se. My definition of a Jupiter analog is 1) a gas giant planet (minimum mass 0.16 Mjup/50 Mea) that is 2) located outside the system’s liquid water zone 3) with an orbit whose eccentricity is under 0.3 and 4) with a semimajor axis that permits the survival of terrestrial planets on habitable orbits but 5) without any gas giant companions on interior orbits. A Solar System analog contains a cool giant that meets all these criteria and is centered around a Sun-like star in the mass range of 0.65-1.30 Msol, corresponding to spectral types between mid K and late F.

HD 95872 nicely satisfies all these criteria and thereby assumes the status of the nearest Solar System analog, demoting HD 154345 to the second-nearest. But Psi Draconis, the other system reported by Endl et al., does not meet my standard. Despite its appealingly memorable name, this system is disqualified by the significant orbital eccentricity (0.4) of its gas giant, Psi Draconis b. It’s a disappointing result, since the host star is very similar to our Sun in age, mass, and spectral type, and it’s only 22 parsecs away.

In light of these recent discoveries, I conducted a new review of the full sample of exoplanets detected by radial velocity measurements (the only technique that has managed to characterize any Solar System analogs). I based the review on a December download of the catalog of the Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia (EPE), with additional revisions based on discovery papers. The results appear in Table 1. Systems are listed by increasing semimajor axis of the Jupiter analog.

Table 1. Seventeen potential analogs of our Solar System
Tags: Type = spectral type; Msol = star mass in Solar units; [Fe/H] = metallicity; Dist. = distance in parsecs (rounded); Mjup = planet mass in Jupiter units; a = semimajor axis in Earth units; e = orbital eccentricity; Period = orbital period in years. Selection criteria: star mass 0.65-1.30 Msol; a > 3 AU; e < 0.3, no interior giants perturbing the system habitable zone. Note: HD 30177 has a second planet, a massive “Saturn analog” on an orbit exterior to planet b, with an uncertain orbital period.
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This is the third time I’ve searched the EPE sample for Solar System analogs during the past few years (previously blogged here and here), and each time the population has grown. HD 95872 is an especially welcome addition. Not only is it the nearest Jupiter analog – it also has the longest orbital period of the lot, making it Jupiter’s closest rival within this subset.
The 17 systems summarized in Table 1 bear a strong family resemblance, at least in terms of their gross parameters. But how much of the apparent similarity might stem from selection biases?

Distance: All but 2 are located at distances between 25 and 60 parsecs; no Solar System analogs have been reported outside that space. Their scarcity inside 25 parsecs might be an accurate reflection of the absolute rarity of such systems, but their absence beyond 60 parsecs almost certainly results from historical limits on the sensitivity of radial velocity searches.

Star mass: Even given my inclusion criterion of 0.65-1.3 Msol, the host stars fall in a narrow range of masses – 0.88-1.18 Msol – and center on a narrow range of spectral types – early to mid G. All are thus extremely similar to our Sun (type G2), while stars less massive than 0.85 Msol are conspicuously absent from the list. Since the entire population is based on continuing searches that began decades ago, this outcome might simply reflect the preference of early search programs for G-type stars. On the other hand, the non-appearance of stars in the range of 0.65-0.85 Msol might be significant. Maybe architectures like the Solar System are restricted to more massive stars.

Metallicity: Eleven out of 17 host stars have Solar metallicity or less; only 4 have [Fe/H] greater than +0.2, which would indicate a notable enhancement in heavy elements. My own (not very educated) guess is that this relative indifference to metallicity might be real. In any case, the scarcity of extremely metal-rich stars in this population supports the premise that our Sun is a typical host of Jupiter analogs. It also warrants a reminder that even the Sun is metal-rich compared to the average star in our Galactic neighborhood, where typical metallicities are about -0.10. Whether or not cool giants on circular orbits are intrinsically rare around stars impoverished in heavy elements, no extreme metallic enrichment seems necessary to form them.

Planet mass: The median gas giant mass in this sample is approximately 2 Mjup, and only 2 of these “Jupiter analogs” have masses smaller than 0.99 Mjup. This outcome might be just another reflection of the limited sensitivity of the radial velocity method, since planets of lower mass are more difficult to detect on long-period orbits. But it might instead be a clue that Jupiter is relatively small for a cool giant, and that most of its analogs are more massive.


Orbital eccentricity: Most gas giants with semimajor axes of 3 AU or more have eccentricities in excess of 0.5, and many giants with smaller eccentricities have giant companions on interior orbits that rule out Earth-like planets. Even in Table 1, which includes only unaccompanied giants with eccentricities < 0.3, the median value of 0.1 is relatively high by the standards of our Solar System. Of course, it’s possible that exoplanetary eccentricities are systematically overestimated (Shen & Turner 2008), and that the giants in Table 1 are actually less eccentric (and therefore friendlier) than they look on the screen. But it’s also possible that cool giants on orbits as circular as Jupiter’s are even rarer than Hot Jupiters. If eccentricity < 0.1 turns out to be the limiting factor for Solar System analogs, then they are much less numerous than I project here.


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On the other hand, if Table 1 presents a reasonable survey of systems like our own, the outlook for Earth-like planets is rosy. The available data now show that 2 out of 260 star systems (0.8%) identified within 10 parsecs – including almost 3% of the 70 FGK stars in this space – host a gas giant on a cool orbit that would permit the survival of Earth-like planets in the habitable zone. Since one of those two star systems (our own) is known to support such a world, we’re entitled to conjecture that the other one (HD 95872) does, too.


If we restrict our scope to stars other than our Sun with confirmed planets, rather than all known stars, we can say that 2% (N=2) of the 79 exoplanetary systems located within 20 parsecs qualify as Solar System analogs. Furthermore, if Jupiter analogs are at least as common as Hot Jupiters, as various analyses suggest, then 3 more systems resembling our own might be awaiting discovery within the same volume of space. That prediction rests on the fact that five Hot Jupiters are already known in this region. If we further extend this back-of-the-envelope approach to a radius of 60 parsecs, we can say that a dozen more Solar System analogs await detection in the immediate Solar neighborhood, since more than 30 Hot Jupiters systems have been reported in that space, but only 17 bona fide analogs of our system.

counting planets in the Sun’s back yard

The statistics on exoplanets within any volume-limited sample depend sensitively on how many such planets we regard as validated. Unfortunately, different exoplanetary catalogs offer different pictures even of the well-studied space within 20 parsecs. Accordingly, I have to approach this problem with a consistent set of exclusions: Alpha Centauri b, Kapteyn’s b & c, all companions identified as brown dwarfs, and all objects reported by direct imaging or astrometry, with the exception of Beta Pictoris b.

When I apply these criteria to the full census maintained by EPE, along with corrections for stellar parameters found in the literature, I get the 79 systems pictured in Figure 1. Given additional exclusions discussed in a series of older blog posts (starting here, most recently here), these 79 systems support a total of 141 planets.

However, if I apply the same criteria to the NASA Exoplanet Archive, I get a notably smaller sample of 65 systems supporting only 113 planets. Much of the mismatch can be explained by NASA’s exclusion of candidates reported in an unpublished manuscript by Michel Mayor & colleagues (2011), as well as other candidates proposed by other investigators on the strength of Bayesian reanalyses of existing radial velocity data (see list of exclusions here). Thus even my relatively skeptical approach might err on the side of optimism.

The difficulty of establishing an accurate count of the known exoplanetary systems, let alone the very nearest, is illustrated by the observational history of Rho Coronae Borealis. This Sun-like star, one of the first to be identified as an exoplanetary host, is located 17.24 parsecs (56 light years) away. In 1997, Robert Noyes & colleagues reported an object (b) with a minimum mass of 1.1 Mjup orbiting this star in a period of 39 days with an eccentricity of 0.03. Although their radial velocity measurements could not rule out much higher masses, they presented theoretical arguments in favor of a gas giant planet instead of a brown dwarf star.

Follow-up studies summarized by Fulton et al. (2016) presented additional astrometric data that, according to several astronomers, unmasked the so-called exoplanet as a very dim M dwarf or massive brown dwarf.  In this argument, the original mass value reported by Noyes & colleagues was a drastic underestimate, because we happen to observe the system from a face-on viewing angle. Such a geometry minimizes the Doppler shift detectable from Earth, whereas an edge-on angle maximizes it. According to this argument, the companion must be at least 100 times more massive than Jupiter.


Most radial velocity detections that are not supported by transit observation are vulnerable to a similar challenge, but the prevailing attitude in the exoplanet community seems to be “innocent until proven guilty.” In the case of Rho Coronae Borealis b, the skeptical argument quietly won the day, and the proposed planet was excluded from EPE sometime around 2011.


Now Fulton’s group has conducted a concentrated observing program to test the planetary hypothesis. Their findings confirm the existence of planet b while ruling out even the dimmest of M dwarfs. Thus Rho Coronae Borealis, jewel in the Northern Crown, has returned to the fold of exoplanet host stars.


Fulton & colleagues also report a second planet (c) with an orbital period of 102 days and a semimajor axis of 0.41 AU, similar to Mercury’s. Depending on our viewing angle, the planet’s minimum mass of 25 Earth units (Mea) suggests either a large low-mass planet like GJ 436 b (a “Super Neptune” or tween) or a small gas giant. In the first alternative, Rho Coronae Borealis would present a relatively rare and extremely interesting architectural feature: a pair of adjacent planets in which the inner object is a gas giant and the outer is a low-mass planet like Neptune. Apart from Rho Coronae Borealis, just five examples of this architecture have been observed: our Solar System (Saturn + Uranus), GJ 876 (planets b + e), Kepler-87 (planets b + c), Kepler-89 (planets d + e), and WASP-47 (planets b + d).


In the second alternative, Rho Coronae Borealis might a scaled-down version of 55 Cancri, which presents an adjacent pair in which the inner object is a massive gas giant (planet b) and the outer is a tween (planet c) of about 55 Mea.

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One of my favorite articles of 2016 was “Challenges in Planet Formation,” by Alessandro Morbidelli & Sean Raymond, two seasoned veterans of exoplanetary science. The authors frankly discuss everything we don’t really know about the evolution of planetary systems, which their opening sentence describes as “a vast, complex, and still quite mysterious subject.” The same characterization could easily apply to our understanding of exoplanetology, given the vast, mysterious, and constantly expanding nature of the extrasolar census. As with planetary evolution, when it comes to the demographics of exoplanets, “even our most successful models are built on a shaky foundation” (Morbidelli & Raymond 2016).

So here’s looking forward to the mysterious, terrifying, and inevitably fascinating events and revelations to come in 2017 . . . .



REFERENCES
Endl M, Brugamyer EJ, Cochran WD, MacQueen PJ, Robertson P, Meschiari S, Ramirez I, Shetrone M, Gullikson K, Johnson MC, Wittenmyer R, Horner J, Ciardi DR, Horch E, Simon AE, Howell SB, Everett M, Caldwell C, Castanheira BG. (2016) Two new long-period giant planets from the McDonald Observatory Planet Search and two stars with long-period radial velocity signals related to stellar activity cycles. Astrophysical Journal 818, 34. Abstract: 2016ApJ...818...34E
Fulton BJ, Howard AW, Weiss LM, Sinukoff E, Petigura EA, Isaacson H, Hirsch L, Marcy GW, Henry GW, Grunblatt SK, Huber D, von Braun K, Boyajian TS, Kane SR, Wittrock J, Horch E, Ciardi DR, Howell SB, Wright JT, Ford EB. (2016) Three temperate Neptunes orbiting nearby stars. Astrophysical Journal 830, 46. Abstract: 2016ApJ...830...46F
Mayor M, Marmier M, Lovis C, Udry S, Ségransan D, Pepe F, Benz W, Bertaux J-L, Bouchy F, Dumusque X, Lo Curto G, Mordasini C, Queloz D, Santos NC. (2011) The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets XXXIV. Occurrence, mass distribution and orbital properties of super-Earths and Neptune-mass planets. Unpublished; abstract at https://arxiv.org/abs/1109.2497
Morbidelli A, Raymond S. (2016) Challenges in planet formation. Invited review; in press. Abstract: 2016arXiv161007202M
Noyes R, Jha S, Korzennik SG, Krockenberger M, Nisenson P, Brown TM, et al. (1997) A planet orbiting the star Rho Coronae Borealis. Astrophysical Journal 483, L111-L114.
Shen Y, Turner EL. (2008) On the eccentricity distribution of exoplanets from radial velocity surveys. Astrophysical Journal 685, 553-559.
Teske JK, Cunha K, Schuler SC, Griffith CA, Smith VV. (2013) Carbon and oxygen abundances in cool metal-rich exoplanet hosts: A case study of the C/O ratio of 55 Cancri. Astrophysical Journal 778, 132.
von Braun K, Boyajian TS, ten Brummelaar TA, Kane SR, van Belle GT, Ciardi DR, Raymond SN, Lopez-Morales M, McAlister HA, Schaefer G, Ridgway ST, Sturmann L, Sturmann J, White R, Turner NH, Farrington C, Goldfinger PJ. (2011) 55 Cancri: Stellar astrophysical parameters, a planet in the habitable zone, and implications for the radius of a transiting Super-Earth. Astrophysical Journal 740, 49.

Sunday, March 27, 2016

The Nearest 20 Parsecs



Figure 1. Familiar bright stars and selected exoplanetary host stars within 20 parsecs (65 light years) of our Sun. This stylized diagram illustrates the perspective of an observer located in the north celestial hemisphere, in the direction of the constellation Draco. Approximate stellar spectral types are coded. Names of host stars appear in turquoise; names of stars without known planets appear in violet.
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With a stellar population in excess of 100 billion and a diameter of at least 30,000 parsecs (100,000 light years), our Milky Way is a good-sized spiral galaxy. Astrophotography has unveiled some of its most spectacular features, from the claw-like filaments just north of Sagittarius A* (our resident black hole, about 7900 parsecs away) to the billowing clouds and blazing young stars of the Carina Nebula (2300 parsecs away) and the delicate filigree of supernovae remnants such as Simeis 147 and Vela (920 and 250 parsecs away, respectively). Yet even as these panoramic views of our local universe swim into focus, other details remain fuzzy, especially when we turn to the question of potential planets orbiting all those billions of stars.

Three decades of searching, using several different techniques, have returned data on 2098 confirmed extrasolar planets in more than 1300 different star systems. The most complete and broadly comparable information continues to flow from radial velocity (RV) and transit searches. Apart from two outliers (SWEEPS-04 and -11, both in the Galactic Bulge), the most remote star with planets detected by either method lies at a distance of 3200 parsecs. That’s more than 10% of the diameter of the Galactic Disk.

But if we take a closer look at the combined sample of RV and transiting planets available in early January (n = 1867), stellar distances shrink fast. Searches of the Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia (EPE), the Kepler Discoveries Table, and various discovery papers found me distance estimates for just 713 stars in that sample. Although they range from 3 to 3200 parsecs, 50% are closer than 90 parsecs, and 70% are no farther than 200 parsecs. The size of those two fractions exposes a critical deficiency in our picture of extrasolar planets: the subset of robustly characterized systems skews sharply in favor of the nearest stars. Even though more than 1000 transiting planets have been confirmed by the Kepler Mission, fewer than 10% of their stellar hosts have distance estimates. The ones with estimates typically reside between 200 and 2700 parsecs.

Evidently our knowledge of transiting as well as RV planets has gaps of near-cosmic proportions.

If we want to grasp the true diversity of extrasolar planets and system architectures, we could do worse than examine a clearly delimited sample of well-constrained systems. I suggest that the best place to find them is the volume of space within 20 parsecs, where diversity is balanced by precision of observation.
 
the immediate solar neighborhood
 
Figure 1 represents a sphere centered on our Sun with a diameter of 40 parsecs. Although this region is devoid of O- and B-type stars – the rarest and most massive species in our Galaxy – all of the more common varieties of main sequence and evolved stars are represented. The brightest nearby objects are young blue-white stars of type A, such as Vega and Sirius, and older red giants, such as Pollux and Aldebaran. Many bright stars in our immediate neighborhood are binary or multiple. For example, both Sirius and Procyon have tiny white dwarf companions that were born as B stars and then rapidly bloomed and withered into their present state. Capella, the third brightest star in northern skies, is actually a quadruple system, consisting of a pair of tightly bound red giants accompanied by a pair of red dwarfs at a separation of 10,000 astronomical units (AU). More than a dozen exoplanetary host stars in our immediate neighborhood are also members of binary or higher-order multiples.

Google couldn’t find me an authoritative estimate of the full stellar population within 20 parsecs, but I did locate some approximate counts of G-type stars in this space (about 130). A rough extrapolation from available sources (Turnbull 2013, RECONS 2012) would suggest a population of 1500-2000 stars inside our 20-parsec radius, with about 75% classed as M dwarfs. (If anyone reading this knows of an authoritative census, please let me know!) Within the full population are 73 host stars accompanied by a total of 129 planets, suggesting that only 3%-5% of stars in this volume can be described as “planetic.” Yet recent studies argue that virtually every star of spectral types M through G (and probably types F through A) harbors at least one planet (Winn & Fabrycky 2015). Evidently a vast population of planetary systems remains to be discovered right on our Galactic doorstep.

Figure 2 sorts the known exoplanetary systems within 20 parsecs according to their distance from our Sun, with each successive ring in the blue background representing an increment of 5 parsecs in the radius of the expanding sphere.

Figure 2. All host stars at 20 parsecs or less, arranged by distance from the Sun

73 exoplanetary host stars sorted by distance from our Sun. Spectral types are indicated by the color key at lower right. The inner circle has a radius of 5 parsecs, and each successive ring represents an increment of 5 parsecs. Stellar icons are arranged in 2 dimensions by right ascension, which is marked at the edge of the outer circle. (Declination is necessarily ignored.) This diagram shows the relative distance of planetary systems from our Sun, but not from each other.
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Inspection of the diagram reveals that the frequency of confirmed host stars per cubic parsec falls rapidly with increasing distance, even within this limited space. So does the ratio of dim stars (spectral type M) to brighter stars. G-type stars, on the other hand, appear to be over-represented. They constitute less than 10% of field stars within 20 parsecs, but almost one-third of the sample of host stars in this space.

About 57% of the planets in Figure 2 are low-mass objects in the same classification as Uranus and Earth (Table 1). These planets have masses smaller than about 0.15 Jupiter masses (0.15 Mjup), equivalent to 48 Earth masses (48 Mea). The remainder are gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn, although very few of them have orbital periods as long as our giants. A similar majority of nearby host stars (55%) harbors a single detected planet. Nonetheless, multiplanet systems are abundant enough that only one-third of all planets in this space occur in singleton systems.

Thus the “average” planet in our neighborhood is a low-mass object with at least one other companion orbiting the same star. Notably, this description applies to six out of eight planets in our Solar System.

Figure 3. Transiting low-mass planets within 20 parsecs

All these planets have been observed in transit from Earth’s orbit. A single transit has also been reported for HD 219134 b. The extrasolar planets in this image have orbital periods shorter than 3 days; the period of 55 Cancri e is shorter than 18 hours.
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Our neighborhood also contains several distinctive architectural designs. The most common (11 systems; 15%) features at least two gas giants. More than half of this sample harbors three or more planets in total, and in 9 out of 11 systems, at least one planet orbits outside 2 AU. Again, this description fits our Solar System, but it also applies to quite different systems, including Upsilon Andromedae, 47 Ursae Majoris, and HD 128311.

The next most common architecture (12%) is the compact low-mass configuration, in which at least three low-mass planets orbit inside 1 AU and no gas giants are detected. This architecture is mutually exclusive with the previous type, and it is extremely common in the Kepler sample. Well-studied examples within 20 parsecs include GJ 581 and HD 69830.

The third most common architecture overlaps with the two-giant design. This is the mixed-mass type (10%), in which a minimum of three planets are present: at least one gas giant and at least one low-mass object. 55 Cancri, GJ 876, and Mu Arae are notable nearby examples containing at least two gas giants each.

In the full exoplanetary sample, the most abundant and easily detectable architecture is the Hot Jupiter configuration, defined as a star accompanied by a gas giant planet with a period of 10 days or less. However, this is only the fourth most common architecture in our immediate neighborhood. Just five (7%) of the systems detected to date in this space contain a Hot Jupiter. Three of them (HD 189733, Tau Boötis, and 51 Pegasi) are singletons. Each of the others(Upsilon Andromedae, HD 217107) harbors at least one additional gas giant on a wider orbit, so these two systems can also be assigned to the two-giant architecture.

Among singleton systems within 20 parsecs, giants have a slight edge, accounting for 58% of this subsample. Hot Jupiters are in a minority, however: the median semimajor axis for single giants in this volume of space is 1.3 AU, compared to 0.1 AU for low-mass singletons. Single giants also tend to orbit more massive stars: inside 20 parsecs, the median host star mass in such systems is 0.9 Msol (maximum 1.65 Msol), whereas the median for hosts of low-mass singletons is 0.49 Msol (maximum 0.97 Msol). These numbers suggest a certain antipathy between hot stars and low-mass planets, whether real or the result of observational bias. Low-mass planets might truly be scarce around hot stars, or they might simply be harder to detect in such environments.

One of the least common architectures revealed to date is the Solar System analog. I define this configuration as a Sun-like star (0.7-1.2 Msol) hosting a gas giant on a circular orbit wider than 3 AU, without any gas giants on interior orbits either occupying or perturbing the system habitable zone. This configuration is a subset of the mixed-mass type. Inside a radius of 20 parsecs, only one system besides our own features such an architecture: HD 154345. More than a dozen others have been reported outside this volume, but the most distant is only 57 parsecs away (see How Weird is Our Solar System? and Almost Jupiter). None are known within the Kepler sample.

Their absence is not surprising, since Kepler collected data for less than four years and observed only planetary transits. The cool gas giant in a Solar System analog will have an orbital period longer than five years (and probably at least twice as long) and it might not be co-planar with the inner planets. In such a configuration, an observer with a fixed viewing angle could never observe both the inner and outer planets in transit.


Table 1. Characteristics of three exoplanetary populations

Among objects listed in EPE in early 2016, two substantially larger, non-overlapping samples are available to compare with the discrete population in our immediate neighborhood: 1) 472 confirmed Kepler systems hosting 1038 planets, and 2) 606 confirmed transiting and RV systems outside 20 parsecs hosting 707 planets, excluding Kepler discoveries. Table 1 compares both samples to the population of 73 host stars and 129 planets within 20 parsecs.

The descriptive statistics summarized in the table suggest at least six salient points:

1. Although all three groups are strongly biased against M dwarfs (defined as stars < 0.7 Msol) and in favor of hot stars (those ≥ 1.2 Msol), our neighborhood population appears to have the most representative selection of stellar hosts. For example, if we want a “typical” M-type sample, the 26 systems orbiting red dwarfs within 20 parsecs are a good place to start.

2. Only the Kepler sample has a minority of single-planet systems, alerting us that even the host stars in our local sample must have many additional planets. These objects have eluded detection so far because they are either very low in mass (and thus undetectable by ground-based RV monitoring) or traveling on long-period orbits (which require a substantial investment of resources to ensure regular observations over a period of decades).

3. The abundance of multiplanet systems in the Kepler sample (78%) is evidence of the opposite bias. It is much easier to confirm the detection of a transiting planet with one or more candidate companions than it is to rule out all sources of false positives for a single planet with similar transit data. Hence Kepler systems with a single transiting planet (“tranet”) are less likely to be confirmed than those with multiple tranets. Nevertheless, a system with a confirmed tranet might still harbor invisible companions if their orbits are widely spaced (Xie et al. 2014) or non-coplanar (Johansen et al. 2012).

4. The relative fractions of low-mass planets in these three samples indicate a more straightforward bias: the RV technique is simply less sensitive to small planets than transit monitoring is, and sensitivity declines rapidly outside 10 parsecs. That limitation probably indicates that hundreds of terrestrial planets are awaiting discovery within our immediate neighborhood.

5. The diversity of system architectures is greatest within 20 parsecs, as demonstrated by the low frequencies of two-giant, compact low-mass, and mixed-mass systems in the other two populations. This feature makes our neighborhood sample especially valuable for comparison studies.

6. Hot Jupiters are heavily represented in all three populations, with the most obvious excess in the RV sample outside 20 parsecs. Nevertheless, the Kepler fraction is quite similar to the fraction in the local population. If only about 1% of Sun-like stars harbor a Hot Jupiter, as recent studies conclude (Bayliss & Sackett 2011, Wright & al. 2012, Wang & al. 2015), both of these samples are unbalanced.

local bubble

If we expand our perspective by an order of magnitude to a radius of 200 parsecs, we see a more varied starscape (Figure 3). This larger volume of space encompasses most of the region known as the Local Bubble, an irregular, gas-free cavity surrounded by molecular hydrogen clouds that trace the Orion Spur of our local spiral arm. Whereas stars in the immediate vicinity of our Sun appear to be a random sample of the Galactic population, our enlarged perspective reveals localized structures.
 
Figure 3. Selected star clusters and exoplanetary systems within 200 parsecs

Selected exoplanetary systems and star clusters within 200 parsecs (652 light years) of our Sun. Each successive ring in the colored circle represents an additional 50 parsecs. In this flattened, two-dimensional schema, stellar icons are distributed by right ascension according to their distance from our Sun, not by their distance from each other. Right ascension is marked by the numbers ascending counterclockwise around the outer ring. 
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Visible are 10 star clusters, some young and bright, others older and dimmer. A star cluster is a compact association in which the space density of stars is much higher than the surrounding environment, and member stars share a similar motion through space. Each cluster population is far from random, since cluster members were born together in the same molecular cloud, and thus have very similar ages and chemical compositions. All stars of the same mass in the same cluster are at the same evolutionary stage.

Star clusters can be described as either embedded or open, depending on the presence (embedded) or absence (open) of remnant hydrogen clouds. Several nearby clusters are still embedded: Rho Ophiuchi, Taurus-Auriga, Chamaeleon I, and Coronet. Their estimated ages range from 1 to 10 million years. The open clusters are substantially older, with the Pleiades about 125 million years old, Praesepe 600 million, and the Hyades 625 million. Notably, planets have been discovered in both Praesepe and the Hyades.

Apart from these astronomically interesting and aesthetically captivating structures, we can also see several field stars that harbor unusual planetary systems. Kepler-16, located only 65 parsecs (212 light years) away, was the first circumbinary system ever detected, and the nearest by a margin of several hundred parsecs. This system includes a K-dwarf and an M-dwarf sharing a binary orbit of 41 days, with an undersized gas giant (Kepler-16b) orbiting their common center of mass in a period of 229 days. Remarkably, even though gas giant environments are inimical to life as we know it, this giant happens to reside in the system’s habitable zone. While we can be pretty sure that circumbinary planets are rare, they might not be so rare that Kepler-16 is alone in our Local Bubble.

Venturing into deeper space, we find not one but two examples of another rare species: conjoined planetary systems, defined as stellar binaries in which each star hosts its own system of planets. XO-2NS comprises two G-type stars with a binary semimajor axis of 4600 AU. Star N hosts a Hot Jupiter; star S hosts two warm gas giants. WASP-94AB is a pair of F-type stars with a binary semimajor axis of 2700 AU. Both stars host Hot Jupiters, with no other planets in evidence.

Then we find the rarest of the rare, the only one of its kind: WASP-47, which includes a Hot Jupiter flanked by two low-mass planets inside 0.1 AU. No other Hot Jupiter has any nearby companions. WASP-47b also belongs to another small club: Hot Jupiters with outer giant companions, of which we identify two inside 20 parsecs, but few others in deeper space.

An unmistakable feature of Figure 3 is the Kepler treasure trail extending outward along right ascension 19 into infinity. Joining Kepler-16 in this procession of wonders is Kepler-444 and its Hot Martian quintuplets (five planets less massive than Earth orbiting a K-type star in periods shorter than 10 days) as well as two M dwarf systems (Kepler-186, 438) hosting small planets that have been widely promoted as potentially habitable Super Earths. Also represented is one of the few mixed-mass systems in the Kepler sample: Kepler-68, which hosts two small transiting planets inside 0.1 AU as well as a non-transiting gas giant detected by radial velocity measurements orbiting just outside 1 AU. All these Kepler systems enhance the diversity of the region between 50 and 200 parsecs, which otherwise presents a bland continuum of relatively bright stars hosting lonely giants.


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