Bibcode
Pasquini, L.; Döllinger, M. P.; Weiss, A.; Girardi, L.; Chavero, C.; Hatzes, A. P.; da Silva, L.; Setiawan, J.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 473, Issue 3, October III 2007, pp.979-982
Advertised on:
10
2007
Journal
Citations
131
Refereed citations
103
Description
Aims: Exo-planets are preferentially found around high metallicity main
sequence stars. We investigate whether evolved stars share this
property, and its implications for planet formation. Methods:
Statistical tools and the basic concepts of stellar evolution theory are
applied to published results as well as our own radial velocity and
chemical analyses of evolved stars. Results: We show that the
metal distributions of planet-hosting (P-H) dwarfs and giants are
different, and that the latter do not favor metal-rich systems. Rather,
these stars follow the same age-metalicity relation as the giants
without planets in our sample. The straightforward explanation is to
attribute the difference between dwarfs and giants to the much larger
masses of giants' convective envelopes. If the metal excess on the main
sequence is due to pollution, the effects of dilution explain why this
is not observed in evolved stars. Conclusions: Although we
cannot exclude other explanations, the lack of any preference for
metal-rich systems among P-H giants could be a strong indication of the
accretion of metal-rich material. We discuss further tests, as well as
some predictions and consequences of this hypothesis.