Knowing which planets can form will help us understand how planets form. So as we discover more and more exoplanets, one must wonder: what if there are certain types of planets that just don’t exist?

Good Form

We know of over 4,000 confirmed exoplanets and nearly as many exoplanet candidates. With a population of this size, we can look for trends in exoplanet characteristics much more easily than we could a decade ago.

The most helpful quantities in this regard are planet radius, planet mass, and orbital period. Plotting these quantities against each other has revealed an abundance of certain planets — like Jupiter-sized planets with short orbits — and a dearth of others. Direct analogs to Neptune appear to be missing, though Neptune-sized planets with shorter periods are common.

Mind the Gap!

Some sorts of planets may genuinely be unable to form, but we also have to consider observational bias. For instance, the transit method (utilized by the Kepler spacecraft and now by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS)) is more sensitive to larger planets with shorter orbital periods. So, any gaps and trends that emerge while plotting exoplanet characteristics have to be tested for authenticity. In a recent study, David Armstrong (University of Warwick, UK) and collaborators focus on a gap that emerges while considering short-period planets less massive than 20 Earths.

Armstrong and collaborators looked at a sample of planets with mass under 25 Earth-masses and orbital periods of less than 20 days. Plotting mass versus orbital period yielded a gap that split their sample into two. The gap was more distinct for planets whose inclinations — and, by extension, planet radii — were known.

Given how many observational biases were involved, the authors chose to investigate the presence of the gap rather than its properties. The authors were especially concerned about whether different methods of mass determination all still produced the gap. A statistical test showed that it persisted regardless of method.

To better define the existence of the gap, the authors fit models to their mass–period data that allowed for multiple underlying distributions. The best fit turned out to be a model that assumed two distinct distributions, supporting the gap’s presence.

In light of this, what could be causing the gap?

Why the Gap?

The authors injected other properties of planetary systems into their mass–period plots. The gap appears impartial to nearly everything, showing trends only with planetary radius. This mild relationship could be due to photoevaporation, the process by which radiation from the host star strips gas off nearby objects. In the case of exoplanets, photoevaporation could shrink a gas giant planet — possibly to its rocky core.

In multi-planet systems, the most stable orbits may be those that don’t put planets in the gap. Another possibility is that stable regions in a system shift as it evolves.

The only way to better understand the gap is to find more exoplanets, which is just what TESS and other efforts are doing. Stay tuned!

Citation ​

“A Gap in the Mass Distribution for Warm Neptune and Terrestrial Planets,” David J. Armstrong ​et al ​ 2019 ​ApJL 880​ L1. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ab2ba2