Primordial Radius Gap and Potentially Broad Core Mass Distributions of Super-Earths and Sub-Neptunes


Abstract in English

The observed radii distribution of {it Kepler} exoplanets reveals two distinct populations: those that are more likely to be terrestrials ($lesssim1.7R_oplus$) and those that are more likely to be gas-enveloped ($gtrsim2R_oplus$). There exists a clear gap in the distribution of radii that separates these two kinds of planets. Mass loss processes like photoevaporation by high energy photons from the host star have been proposed as natural mechanisms to carve out this radius valley. These models favor underlying core mass function of sub-Neptunes that is sharply peaked at $sim$4--8$M_oplus$ but the radial-velocity follow-up of these small planets hint at a more bottom-heavy mass function. By taking into account the initial gas accretion in gas-poor (but not gas-empty) nebula, we demonstrate that 1) the observed radius valley is a robust feature that is initially carved out at formation during late-time gas accretion; and 2) that it can be reconciled with core mass functions that are broad extending well into sub-Earth regime. The maximally cooled isothermal limit prohibits cores lighter than $sim$1--2$M_oplus$ from accreting enough mass to appear gas-enveloped. The rocky-to-enveloped transition established at formation produces a gap in the radius distribution that shifts to smaller radii farther from the star, similar to that observed. For the best agreement with the data, our late-time gas accretion model favors dust-free accretion in hotter disks with cores slightly less dense than the Earth ($sim$0.8$rho_oplus$) drawn from a mass function that is as broad as $dN/dM_{rm core} propto M_{rm core}^{-0.7}$.

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