Planet Engulfment Detections are Rare According to Observations and Stellar Modeling
Abstract
Dynamical evolution within planetary systems can cause planets to be engulfed by their host stars. Following engulfment, the stellar photosphere abundance pattern will reflect accretion of rocky material from planets. Multi-star systems are excellent environments to search for such abundance trends because stellar companions form from the same natal gas cloud and are thus expected to share primordial chemical compositions to within 0.03-0.05 dex. Abundance measurements have occasionally yielded rocky enhancements, but few observations targeted known planetary systems. To address this gap, we carried out a Keck-HIRES survey of 36 multi-star systems where at least one star is a known planet host. We found that only HAT-P-4 exhibits an abundance pattern suggestive of engulfment, but is more likely primordial based on its large projected separation (30,000 140 AU) that exceeds typical turbulence scales in molecular clouds. To understand the lack of engulfment detections among our systems, we quantified the strength and duration of refractory enrichments in stellar photospheres using MESA stellar models. We found that observable signatures from 10 M engulfment events last for 90 Myr in 1 M stars. Signatures are largest and longest lived for 1.1-1.2 M stars, but are no longer observable 2 Gyr post-engulfment. This indicates that engulfment will rarely be detected in systems that are several Gyr old.
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