The orbital distribution of giant planets is crucial for understanding how terrestrial planets form and predicting yields of exoplanet surveys. Here, we derive giant planets occurrence rates as a function of orbital period by taking into account the detection efficiency of the Kepler and radial velocity (RV) surveys. The giant planet occurrence rates for Kepler and RV show the same rising trend with increasing distance from the star. We identify a break in the RV giant planet distribution between similar to 2 and 3 au-close to the location of the snow line in the solar systemafter which the occurrence rate decreases with distance from the star. Extrapolating a broken power-law distribution to larger semimajor axes, we find good agreement wi...
The Kepler mission found hundreds of planet candidates within the Habitable Zones (HZ) of their host...
We calculate an empirical, non-parametric estimate of the shape of the period-marginalized radius di...
The origin of close-in giant planets is a key open question in planet formation theory. The two lead...
The orbital distribution of giant planets is crucial for understanding how terrestrial planets form ...
We investigate the origin of the period distribution of giant planets. We fit the bias-corrected dis...
We present a statistical study of the post-formation migration of giant planets in a range of initia...
article in press in A&A, 21 pages, 18 figuresInternational audienceTransiting extrasolar planets are...
Context. Radial velocity surveys of evolved stars allow us to probe a higher stellar mass range, on ...
Context. Radial velocity surveys of evolved stars allow us to probe a higher stellar mass range, on ...
We present here observational evidence that the snowline plays a significant role in the formation a...
We used high-precision radial velocity measurements of FGKM stars to determine the occurrence of gia...
To understand giant planet formation, we need to focus on host stars close to , where the occurre...
RV surveys of evolved stars allow us to probe a higher stellar mass range compared to main-sequence ...
We use a semianalytic circumstellar disk model that considers movement of the snow line through evol...
Transiting extrasolar planets are now discovered jointly by photometric surveys and by radial veloci...
The Kepler mission found hundreds of planet candidates within the Habitable Zones (HZ) of their host...
We calculate an empirical, non-parametric estimate of the shape of the period-marginalized radius di...
The origin of close-in giant planets is a key open question in planet formation theory. The two lead...
The orbital distribution of giant planets is crucial for understanding how terrestrial planets form ...
We investigate the origin of the period distribution of giant planets. We fit the bias-corrected dis...
We present a statistical study of the post-formation migration of giant planets in a range of initia...
article in press in A&A, 21 pages, 18 figuresInternational audienceTransiting extrasolar planets are...
Context. Radial velocity surveys of evolved stars allow us to probe a higher stellar mass range, on ...
Context. Radial velocity surveys of evolved stars allow us to probe a higher stellar mass range, on ...
We present here observational evidence that the snowline plays a significant role in the formation a...
We used high-precision radial velocity measurements of FGKM stars to determine the occurrence of gia...
To understand giant planet formation, we need to focus on host stars close to , where the occurre...
RV surveys of evolved stars allow us to probe a higher stellar mass range compared to main-sequence ...
We use a semianalytic circumstellar disk model that considers movement of the snow line through evol...
Transiting extrasolar planets are now discovered jointly by photometric surveys and by radial veloci...
The Kepler mission found hundreds of planet candidates within the Habitable Zones (HZ) of their host...
We calculate an empirical, non-parametric estimate of the shape of the period-marginalized radius di...
The origin of close-in giant planets is a key open question in planet formation theory. The two lead...