Small planets, 1-4x the size of Earth, are extremely common around Sun-like
stars, and surprisingly so, as they are missing in our solar system. Recent
detections have yielded enough information about this class of exoplanets to
begin characterizing their occurrence rates, orbits, masses, densities, and
internal structures. The Kepler mission finds the smallest planets to be most
common, as 26% of Sun-like stars have small, 1-2 R_e planets with orbital
periods under 100 days, and 11% have 1-2 R_e planets that receive 1-4x the
incident stellar flux that warms our Earth. These Earth-size planets are
sprinkled uniformly with orbital distance (logarithmically) out to 0.4 AU, and
probably beyond. Mass measurements for 33 transiting planets of 1-4 R_e show
that the smallest of them, R < 1.5 R_e, have the density expected for rocky
planets. Their densities increase with increasing radius, likely caused by
gravitational compression. Including solar system planets yields a relation:
rho = 2.32 + 3.19 R/R_e [g/cc]. Larger planets, in the radius range 1.5-4.0
R_e, have densities that decline with increasing radius, revealing increasing
amounts of low-density material in an envelope surrounding a rocky core,
befitting the appellation "mini-Neptunes." Planets of ~1.5 R_e have the highest
densities, averaging near 10 g/cc. The gas giant planets occur preferentially
around stars that are rich in heavy elements, while rocky planets occur around
stars having a range of heavy element abundances. One explanation is that the
fast formation of rocky cores in protoplanetary disks enriched in heavy
elements permits the gravitational accumulation of gas before it vanishes,
forming giant planets. But models of the formation of 1-4 R_e planets remain
uncertain. Defining habitable zones remains difficult, without benefit of
either detections of life elsewhere or an understanding of life's biochemical
origins.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication Proc. Natl. Acad. Sc