Abstract
Abstract
One of the fundamental questions in astronomy is how planetary systems form and evolve. Measuring the planetary occurrence and architecture as a function of time directly addresses this question. In the fourth paper of the Planets Across Space and Time series, we investigate the occurrence and architecture of Kepler planetary systems as a function of kinematic age by using the LAMOST–Gaia–Kepler sample. To isolate the age effect, other stellar properties (e.g., metallicity) have been controlled. We find the following results. (1) The fraction of stars with Kepler-like planets (F
Kep) is about 50% for all stars; no significant trend is found between F
Kep and age. (2) The average planet multiplicity (
N
¯
p
) exhibits a decreasing trend (∼2σ significance) with age. It decreases from
N
¯
p
∼ 3 for stars younger than 1 Gyr to
N
¯
p
∼ 1.8 for stars of about 8 Gyr. (3) The number of planets per star (η = F
Kep×
N
¯
p
) also shows a decreasing trend (∼2σ–3σ significance). It decreases from η ∼ 1.6–1.7 for young stars to η ∼ 1.0 for old stars. (4) The mutual orbital inclination of the planets (σ
i,k
) increases from
1
.°
2
−
0.5
+
1.4
to
3
.°
5
−
2.3
+
8.1
as the stars age from 0.5 to 8 Gyr with a best fit of
log
σ
i
,
k
=
0.2
+
0.4
×
log
Age
1
Gyr
. Interestingly, the solar system also fits such a trend. The fact that F
Kep remains relatively constant at approximately ∼ 50% across different ages suggests the robustness of planet formation throughout the history of the Galaxy. The age dependence of
N
¯
p
and σ
i,k
demonstrates that the planetary architecture is evolving, and planetary systems generally become dynamically hotter with fewer planets as they age.
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
2 articles.
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