Metallicities of M Dwarf Planet Host Stars from Kepler, K2, and TESS Observed by APOGEE: Trends with Exoplanetary Radii and Orbital Periods

  • Fábio Wanderley
  • , Katia Cunha
  • , Diogo Souto
  • , Verne V. Smith
  • , Simone Daflon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

One important property in studying the exoplanet population is the host star metallicity ([M/H]). In this study, we derived stellar metallicities and oxygen abundances for 48 M dwarf stars using the near-infrared high-resolution spectra from the SDSS APOGEE survey and synthetic spectra computed in LTE. We also investigated the exoplanetary radii distribution for a larger sample of 246 exoplanets orbiting 188 M dwarf stars. The [M/H] versus [O/M] distribution obtained indicates that our sample is composed mainly of thin disk stars, which follow the behavior of the low-alpha sequence in the Milky Way thin disk. Small planets with radii smaller than 3R were found around stars with a range of metallicities (−0.6 < [M/H] < +0.3), while larger planets of the sample orbit only stars with [M/H]≥ 0.0. These results indicate that while small planets can form in different environments, larger planets preferentially form in metal-rich protoplanetary disks. Exoplanets with Porb < 4.3 days orbit on average more metal-rich stars than planets with longer periods. This threshold is smaller than that found for FGK stars (8-10 days) and might be related to M dwarfs having a smaller dust sublimation radius. The distribution of exoplanets with Rp > 4R shows a concentration at orbital periods between 2 and 5 days, which may result from inward orbital migration. There is also a different behavior between single-detected exoplanets and planets from multiplanetary systems, with the latter being found on average around more metal-poor stars, and with planetary radii roughly up to 3 R⊕.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number177
JournalAstronomical Journal
Volume170
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2025

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

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