In this paper we present beryllium (Be) abundances in a large sample of 41
extra-solar planet host stars, and for 29 stars without any known
planetary-mass companion, spanning a large range of effective temperatures. The
Be abundances were derived through spectral synthesis done in standard Local
Thermodynamic Equilibrium, using spectra obtained with various instruments. The
results seem to confirm that overall, planet-host stars have ``normal'' Be
abundances, although a small, but not significant, difference might be present.
This result is discussed, and we show that this difference is probably not due
to any stellar ``pollution'' events. In other words, our results support the
idea that the high-metal content of planet-host stars has, overall, a
``primordial'' origin. However, we also find a small subset of planet-host
late-F and early-G dwarfs that might have higher than average Be abundances.
The reason for the offset is not clear, and might be related either to the
engulfment of planetary material, to galactic chemical evolution effects, or to
stellar-mass differences for stars of similar temperature.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic