先天vs.后天:评估行星轨道特性和恒星年龄之间明显相关性的贝叶斯框架

Emily D. Safsten, R. Dawson, A. Wolfgang
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引用次数: 4

摘要

许多系外行星的轨道特征与我们在太阳系中看到的轨道特征大不相同,包括锁定在轨道共振中的行星,以及椭圆轨道或与主恒星自转轴高度倾斜的行星。系统架构的广泛多样性主要是由于形成条件的差异(自然)还是由于随时间的进化(后天),这是有争议的。确定行星和恒星属性之间的趋势,包括恒星年龄,可以帮助区分这些相互竞争的理论,并提供关于行星如何形成和演化的见解。然而,要确定观测到的行星特性和恒星年龄之间的趋势是由系统的年龄驱动的,还是由年龄可能相关的其他参数驱动的,比如恒星质量或恒星温度,这可能是一个挑战。由于选择偏差的可能性、少量统计、恒星年龄的不确定性以及轨道演化时间尺度通常比观测到的年龄范围短得多,情况进一步复杂化。在这里,我们开发了一个贝叶斯统计框架来评估这种观察到的相关性的稳健性,并确定它们是否确实是由于进化过程,更有可能反映不同的形成情景,或者仅仅是巧合。我们将这一框架应用于已报道的恒星年龄与2:1轨道共振、自旋轨道偏差和热木星轨道偏心率之间的趋势。只有在最后一种情况下,我们才找到了对后天培养假说的有力支持。
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Nature vs. nurture: a Bayesian framework for assessing apparent correlations between planetary orbital properties and stellar ages
Many exoplanets have orbital characteristics quite different from those seen in our own solar system, including planets locked in orbital resonances and planets on orbits that are elliptical or highly inclined from their host star's spin axis. It is debated whether the wide variety in system architecture is primarily due to differences in formation conditions (nature) or due to evolution over time (nurture). Identifying trends between planetary and stellar properties, including stellar age, can help distinguish between these competing theories and offer insights as to how planets form and evolve. However, it can be challenging to determine whether observed trends between planetary properties and stellar age are driven by the age of the system -- pointing to evolution over time being an important factor -- or other parameters to which the age may be related, such as stellar mass or stellar temperature. The situation is complicated further by the possibilities of selection biases, small number statistics, uncertainties in stellar age, and orbital evolution timescales that are typically much shorter than the range of observed ages. Here we develop a Bayesian statistical framework to assess the robustness of such observed correlations and to determine whether they are indeed due to evolutionary processes, are more likely to reflect different formation scenarios, or are merely coincidental. We apply this framework to reported trends between stellar age and 2:1 orbital resonances, spin-orbit misalignments, and hot Jupiters' orbital eccentricities. We find strong support for the nurture hypothesis only in the final case.
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