The effects of viewing angle on the mass distribution of exoplanets


Abstract in English

We present a mathematical method to statistically decouple the effects of unknown inclination angles on the mass distribution of exoplanets that have been discovered using radial-velocity techniques. The method is based on the distribution of the product of two random variables. Thus, if one assumes a true mass distribution, the method makes it possible to recover the observed distribution. We compare our prediction with available radial-velocity data. Assuming the true mass function is described by a power-law, the minimum mass function that we recover proves a good fit to the observed distribution at both mass ends. In particular, it provides an alternative explanation for the observed low-mass decline, usually explained as sample incompleteness. In addition, the peak observed near the the low-mass end arises naturally in the predicted distribution as a consequence of imposing a low-mass cutoff in the true-distribution. If the low-mass bins below 0.02 M_J are complete, then the mass distribution in this regime is heavily affected by the small fraction of lowly inclined interlopers that are actually more massive companions. Finally, we also present evidence that the exoplanet mass distribution changes form towards low-mass, implying that a single power law may not adequately describe the sample population.

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