Bibcode
Santos, N. C.; Israelian, G.; Mayor, M.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.415, p.1153-1166 (2004)
Advertised on:
3
2004
Journal
Citations
855
Refereed citations
751
Description
We present stellar parameters and metallicities, obtained from a
detailed spectroscopic analysis, for a large sample of 98 stars known to
be orbited by planetary mass companions (almost all known targets), as
well as for a volume-limited sample of 41 stars not known to host any
planet. For most of the stars the stellar parameters are revised
versions of the ones presented in our previous work. However, we also
present parameters for 18 stars with planets not previously published,
and a compilation of stellar parameters for the remaining 4 planet-hosts
for which we could not obtain a spectrum. A comparison of our stellar
parameters with values of Teff, log g, and [Fe/H] available
in the literature shows a remarkable agreement. In particular, our
spectroscopic log g values are now very close to trigonometric log g
estimates based on Hipparcos parallaxes. The derived [Fe/H] values are
then used to confirm the previously known result that planets are more
prevalent around metal-rich stars. Furthermore, we confirm that the
frequency of planets is a strongly rising function of the stellar
metallicity, at least for stars with [Fe/H] > 0. While only about 3%
of the solar metallicity stars in the CORALIE planet search sample were
found to be orbited by a planet, this number increases to more than 25%
for stars with [Fe/H] above +0.3. Curiously, our results also suggest
that these percentages might remain relatively constant for values of
[Fe/H] lower than about solar, increasing then linearly with the mass
fraction of heavy elements. These results are discussed in the context
of the theories of planetary formation.
Based on observations collected at the La Silla Observatory, ESO
(Chile), with the CORALIE spectrograph at the 1.2-m Euler Swiss
telescope and the FEROS spectrograph at the 1.52-m and 2.2-m ESO
telescopes, with the VLT/UT2 Kueyen telescope (Paranal Observatory, ESO,
Chile) using the UVES spectrograph (Observing run 67.C-0206, in service
mode), with the TNG and William Herschel Telescopes, both operated at
the island of La Palma, and with the ELODIE spectrograph at the 1.93-m
telescope at the Observatoire de Haute Provence.