The Exoplanet Population Observation Simulator. II. Population Synthesis in the Era of Kepler
暂无分享,去创建一个
Daniel Apai | Christoph Mordasini | Ilaria Pascucci | Gijs D. Mulders | Alexandre Emsenhuber | D. Apai | G. Mulders | I. Pascucci | F. Ciesla | C. Mordasini | Fred J. Ciesla | A. Emsenhuber
[1] D. Apai,et al. VOLATILE DELIVERY TO PLANETS FROM WATER-RICH PLANETESIMALS AROUND LOW-MASS STARS , 2015, 1502.07412.
[2] F. Ménard,et al. The Inner Radius of T Tauri Disks Estimated from Near-Infrared Interferometry: The Importance of Scattered Light , 2007, 0712.0012.
[3] Awad Aubad,et al. Towards a framework building for social systems modelling , 2020 .
[4] E. Chiang,et al. Magnetospheric Truncation, Tidal Inspiral, and the Creation of Short-period and Ultra-short-period Planets , 2017, 1702.08461.
[5] Christoph Mordasini,et al. Compositional Imprints in Density–Distance–Time: A Rocky Composition for Close-in Low-mass Exoplanets from the Location of the Valley of Evaporation , 2017, 1706.00251.
[6] D. Lin,et al. Toward a Deterministic Model of Planetary Formation. I. A Desert in the Mass and Semimajor Axis Distributions of Extrasolar Planets , 2004 .
[7] John D. Hunter,et al. Matplotlib: A 2D Graphics Environment , 2007, Computing in Science & Engineering.
[8] Geoffrey A. Blake,et al. CO ROVIBRATIONAL EMISSION AS A PROBE OF INNER DISK STRUCTURE , 2011, 1109.4579.
[9] A. Johansen,et al. CAN PLANETARY INSTABILITY EXPLAIN THE KEPLER DICHOTOMY? , 2012, 1206.6898.
[10] M. Ireland,et al. THE IMPACT OF STELLAR MULTIPLICITY ON PLANETARY SYSTEMS. I. THE RUINOUS INFLUENCE OF CLOSE BINARY COMPANIONS , 2016, 1604.05744.
[11] Travis E. Oliphant,et al. Python for Scientific Computing , 2007, Computing in Science & Engineering.
[12] Wei Zhu,et al. About 30% of Sun-like Stars Have Kepler-like Planetary Systems: A Study of Their Intrinsic Architecture , 2018, The Astrophysical Journal.
[13] B. Hansen. Perturbation of Compact Planetary Systems by Distant Giant Planets , 2016, 1608.06300.
[14] Miguel de Val-Borro,et al. The Astropy Project: Building an Open-science Project and Status of the v2.0 Core Package , 2018, The Astronomical Journal.
[15] Khadeejah A. Zamudio,et al. Planetary Candidates Observed by Kepler. VIII. A Fully Automated Catalog with Measured Completeness and Reliability Based on Data Release 25 , 2017, The Astrophysical journal. Supplement series.
[16] D. Huber,et al. Revised Radii of Kepler Stars and Planets Using Gaia Data Release 2 , 2018, The Astrophysical Journal.
[17] A. Fortier,et al. Planet formation models: the interplay with the planetesimal disc , 2012, 1210.4009.
[18] M. R. Haas,et al. FALSE POSITIVE PROBABILITIES FOR ALL KEPLER OBJECTS OF INTEREST: 1284 NEWLY VALIDATED PLANETS AND 428 LIKELY FALSE POSITIVES , 2016, 1605.02825.
[19] Jake Vanderplas,et al. The Astropy Project: Building an inclusive, open-science project and status of the v2.0 software , 2018 .
[20] Darin Ragozzine,et al. Architectures of exoplanetary systems – I. A clustered forward model for exoplanetary systems around Kepler’s FGK stars , 2019, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
[21] Willy Benz,et al. Extrasolar planet population synthesis I: Method, formation tracks and mass-distance distribution , 2009, 0904.2524.
[22] M. R. Haas,et al. TERRESTRIAL PLANET OCCURRENCE RATES FOR THE KEPLER GK DWARF SAMPLE , 2015, 1506.04175.
[23] C. Ormel,et al. Formation of TRAPPIST-1 and other compact systems , 2017, 1703.06924.
[24] D. Duev,et al. Robo-AO Kepler Survey. V. The Effect of Physically Associated Stellar Companions on Planetary Systems , 2018, The Astronomical Journal.
[25] B. Hansen,et al. MIGRATION THEN ASSEMBLY: FORMATION OF NEPTUNE-MASS PLANETS INSIDE 1 AU , 2011, 1105.2050.
[26] T. Henning,et al. Impacts of planet migration models on planetary populations Effects of saturation, cooling and stellar irradiation , 2014, 1402.5969.
[27] Willy Benz,et al. Models of giant planet formation with migration and disc evolution , 2004 .
[28] S. Raymond,et al. Breaking the chains: hot super-Earth systems from migration and disruption of compact resonant chains , 2017, 1703.03634.
[29] A. Fortier,et al. Theoretical models of planetary system formation: mass vs. semi-major axis , 2013, 1307.4864.
[30] K. Stassun,et al. Planetary Habitability Informed by Planet Formation and Exoplanet Demographics , 2019 .
[31] M. R. Haas,et al. PLANET OCCURRENCE WITHIN 0.25 AU OF SOLAR-TYPE STARS FROM KEPLER , 2011, 1103.2541.
[32] Y. Alibert,et al. Characterization of exoplanets from their formation - I. Models of combined planet formation and evolution , 2012, 1206.6103.
[33] S. Ballard,et al. THE KEPLER DICHOTOMY AMONG THE M DWARFS: HALF OF SYSTEMS CONTAIN FIVE OR MORE COPLANAR PLANETS , 2014, 1410.4192.
[34] K. Rice,et al. How formation time-scales affect the period dependence of the transition between rocky super-Earths and gaseous sub-Neptunesand implications for η⊕ , 2016, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
[35] Howard Isaacson,et al. The Occurrence and Mass Distribution of Close-in Super-Earths, Neptunes, and Jupiters , 2010, Science.
[36] W. Benz,et al. Effects of disk irradiation on planet population synthesis , 2012 .
[37] A. V. Elteren,et al. The signatures of the parental cluster on field planetary systems , 2017, 1711.01274.
[38] B. Hansen,et al. TESTING IN SITU ASSEMBLY WITH THE KEPLER PLANET CANDIDATE SAMPLE , 2013, 1301.7431.
[39] Gaël Varoquaux,et al. The NumPy Array: A Structure for Efficient Numerical Computation , 2011, Computing in Science & Engineering.
[40] Y. Alibert,et al. Global models of planet formation and evolution , 2014, International Journal of Astrobiology.
[41] Christoph Mordasini,et al. PLANETARY POPULATION SYNTHESIS COUPLED WITH ATMOSPHERIC ESCAPE: A STATISTICAL VIEW OF EVAPORATION , 2014, 1409.2879.
[42] S. P. Littlefair,et al. THE ASTROPY PROJECT: BUILDING AN INCLUSIVE, OPEN-SCIENCE PROJECT AND STATUS OF THE V2.0 CORE PACKAGE , 2018 .
[43] Daniel Apai,et al. The Exoplanet Population Observation Simulator. I. The Inner Edges of Planetary Systems , 2018, The Astronomical Journal.
[44] D. Apai,et al. A STELLAR-MASS-DEPENDENT DROP IN PLANET OCCURRENCE RATES , 2014, 1406.7356.
[45] Eric B. Ford,et al. Occurrence Rates of Planets Orbiting FGK Stars: Combining Kepler DR25, Gaia DR2, and Bayesian Inference , 2019, The Astronomical Journal.
[46] N. Kaib,et al. Building the terrestrial planets: Constrained accretion in the inner Solar System , 2009, 0905.3750.
[47] G. Mulders,et al. The Impact of Stripped Cores on the Frequency of Earth-size Planets in the Habitable Zone , 2019, The Astrophysical Journal.
[48] D. Bennett,et al. Microlensing Results Challenge the Core Accretion Runaway Growth Scenario for Gas Giants , 2018, The Astrophysical Journal.
[49] Eric Jones,et al. SciPy: Open Source Scientific Tools for Python , 2001 .
[50] A. Youdin. THE EXOPLANET CENSUS: A GENERAL METHOD APPLIED TO KEPLER , 2011, 1105.1782.
[51] Ewine F. van Dishoeck,et al. The VLA Nascent Disk and Multiplicity Survey of Perseus Protostars (VANDAM). IV. Free–Free Emission from Protostars: Links to Infrared Properties, Outflow Tracers, and Protostellar Disk Masses , 2018, The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series.
[52] F. Ciesla,et al. Dynamics of the terrestrial planets from a large number of N-body simulations , 2014 .
[53] A. Dupree,et al. THE KEPLER FOLLOW-UP OBSERVATION PROGRAM. I. A CATALOG OF COMPANIONS TO KEPLER STARS FROM HIGH-RESOLUTION IMAGING , 2016, 1612.02392.
[54] Ryan C. Terrien,et al. HABITABLE ZONES AROUND MAIN-SEQUENCE STARS: NEW ESTIMATES , 2013, 1301.6674.
[55] Willy Benz,et al. Extrasolar planet population synthesis - II. Statistical comparison with observations , 2009, 0904.2542.
[56] John C. Moriarty,et al. THE KEPLER DICHOTOMY IN PLANETARY DISKS: LINKING KEPLER OBSERVABLES TO SIMULATIONS OF LATE-STAGE PLANET FORMATION , 2015, 1512.03445.
[57] David Kipping,et al. The multiplicity distribution of Kepler’s exoplanets , 2019, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
[58] L. Testi,et al. A STEEPER THAN LINEAR DISK MASS–STELLAR MASS SCALING RELATION , 2016, 1608.03621.
[59] Daniel Foreman-Mackey,et al. emcee: The MCMC Hammer , 2012, 1202.3665.
[60] E. Ford,et al. Formation of short-period planets by disc migration , 2019, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
[61] C. S. Fernandes,et al. Seven temperate terrestrial planets around the nearby ultracool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 , 2017, Nature.
[62] D. Charbonneau,et al. THE OCCURRENCE OF POTENTIALLY HABITABLE PLANETS ORBITING M DWARFS ESTIMATED FROM THE FULL KEPLER DATASET AND AN EMPIRICAL MEASUREMENT OF THE DETECTION SENSITIVITY , 2015, 1501.01623.
[63] S. Desch,et al. Updated Compositional Models of the TRAPPIST-1 Planets , 2018, Research Notes of the AAS.
[64] Y. Alibert,et al. Characterization of exoplanets from their formation - II. The planetary mass-radius relationship , 2012, 1206.3303.
[65] C. Mordasini. Planetary Population Synthesis , 2010, 1804.01532.
[66] Christoph Mordasini,et al. Hints for a Turnover at the Snow Line in the Giant Planet Occurrence Rate , 2018, The Astrophysical Journal.
[67] J. Chambers. A hybrid symplectic integrator that permits close encounters between massive bodies , 1999 .
[68] Howard Isaacson,et al. The California-Kepler Survey. III. A Gap in the Radius Distribution of Small Planets , 2017, 1703.10375.
[69] M. E. Everett,et al. The Kepler Follow-up Observation Program. II. Stellar Parameters from Medium- and High-resolution Spectroscopy , 2018, The Astrophysical Journal.
[70] Jon K. Zink,et al. Accounting for incompleteness due to transit multiplicity inKeplerplanet occurrence rates , 2018, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
[71] John C. Geary,et al. ARCHITECTURE OF KEPLER'S MULTI-TRANSITING SYSTEMS. II. NEW INVESTIGATIONS WITH TWICE AS MANY CANDIDATES , 2012, The Astrophysical Journal.
[72] D. Ragozzine,et al. EFFICIENT GEOMETRIC PROBABILITIES OF MULTI-TRANSITING EXOPLANETARY SYSTEMS FROM CORBITS , 2016, 1602.07014.
[73] T. Guillot,et al. SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates XVII. The physical properties of giant exoplanets within 400 days of period , 2015, 1511.00643.
[74] D. Apai,et al. AN INCREASE IN THE MASS OF PLANETARY SYSTEMS AROUND LOWER-MASS STARS , 2015, 1510.02481.
[75] A. Kraus,et al. THE MASS DEPENDENCE BETWEEN PROTOPLANETARY DISKS AND THEIR STELLAR HOSTS , 2013, 1305.5262.
[76] M. Davies,et al. On the origin of eccentricities among extrasolar planets , 2008, 0811.3420.
[77] Austin,et al. A Decreased Probability of Habitable Planet Formation around Low-Mass Stars , 2007, 0707.1711.
[78] Yanqin Wu,et al. DENSITY AND ECCENTRICITY OF KEPLER PLANETS , 2012, 1210.7810.
[79] S. Ida,et al. Towards a Deterministic Model of Planetary Formation I: a Desert in the Mass and Semi Major Axis Distributions of Extra Solar Planets , 2022 .
[80] Eugene Chiang,et al. CORRELATIONS BETWEEN COMPOSITIONS AND ORBITS ESTABLISHED BY THE GIANT IMPACT ERA OF PLANET FORMATION , 2015, 1512.04951.