The California-Kepler Survey. III. A Gap in the Radius Distribution of Small Planets*
California Institute of Technology · University of Hawaii System · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract The size of a planet is an observable property directly connected to the physics of its formation and evolution. We used precise radius measurements from the California- Kepler Survey to study the size distribution of 2025 Kepler planets in fine detail. We detect a factor of ≥2 deficit in the occurrence rate distribution at 1.5–2.0 . This gap splits the population of close-in ( P < 100 days) small planets into two size regimes: and , with few planets in between. Planets in these two regimes have nearly the same intrinsic frequency based on occurrence measurements that account for planet detection efficiencies. The paucity of planets between 1.5 and 2.0 supports the emerging picture that close-in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 89.98
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 148
Authors
13- BJBenjamin J. FultonCorresponding
California Institute of Technology, University of Hawaii System
- EAErik A. Petigura
California Institute of Technology
- AWAndrew W. Howard
California Institute of Technology
- HIHoward Isaacson
University of California, Berkeley
- GWGeoffrey W. Marcy
University of California, Berkeley
Topics & keywords
- Planet
- RADIUS
- Kepler
- Physics
- Neptune
- Astrophysics
- Observable
- Population