The GAPS Programme with HARPS-N at TNG XVIII. Two new giant planets around the metal-poor stars HD 220197 and HD 233832
Abstract
Statistical studies of exoplanets have shown that giant planets are more commonly hosted by metal-rich dwarf stars than low-metallicity ones, while such a correlation is not evident for lower-mass planets. The search for giant planets around metal-poor stars and the estimate of their occurrence fp is an important element in providing support to models of planet formation. We present results from the HARPS-N search for giant planets orbiting metal-poor (-1.0≤[Fe/H]≤-0.5 dex) stars in the northern hemisphere complementing a previous HARPS survey on southern stars in order to update the estimate of fp. High-precision HARPS-N observations of 42 metal-poor stars are used to search for planetary signals to be fitted using differential evolution MCMC single-Keplerian models. We then join our detections to the results of the previous HARPS survey on 88 metal-poor stars to provide a preliminar estimate of the two-hemisphere fp. We report the detection of two new giant planets around HD 220197 and HD 233832. The first companion has Mi=0.20-0.04+0.07 M Jup and orbital period of 1728-80+162 days, and for the second companion we find two solutions of equal statistical weight having periods 2058-40+47 and 4047-117+91 days and minimum masses of 1.78-0.06+0.08 and 2.72-0.23+0.23 M Jup, respectively. Joining our two detections with the three from the southern survey we obtain a preliminary and conservative estimate of global frequency of fp=3.84-1.06+2.45\% for giant planets around metal-poor stars. The two new giant planets orbit dwarf stars at the metal-rich end of the HARPS-N metal-poor sample, corroborating previous results suggesting that giant planet frequency still is a rising function of host star [Fe/H]. We also note that all detections in the overall sample are giant long-period planets.
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