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Published May 1, 2013 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Mass of KOI-94d and a Relation for Planet Radius, Mass, and Incident Flux

Abstract

We measure the mass of a modestly irradiated giant planet, KOI-94d. We wish to determine whether this planet, which is in a 22 day orbit and receives 2700 times as much incident flux as Jupiter, is as dense as Jupiter or rarefied like inflated hot Jupiters. KOI-94 also hosts at least three smaller transiting planets, all of which were detected by the Kepler mission. With 26 radial velocities of KOI-94 from the W. M. Keck Observatory and a simultaneous fit to the Kepler light curve, we measure the mass of the giant planet and determine that it is not inflated. Support for the planetary interpretation of the other three candidates comes from gravitational interactions through transit timing variations, the statistical robustness of multi-planet systems against false positives, and several lines of evidence that no other star resides within the photometric aperture. We report the properties of KOI-94b (M_P = 10.5 ± 4.6 M_⊕, R_P = 1.71 ± 0.16 R_⊕, P = 3.74 days), KOI-94c (M_P = 15.6^(+5.7)_(-15.6) M_⊕, R_P = 4.32 ± 0.41 R_⊕, P = 10.4 days), KOI-94d (M_P = 106 ± 11 M_⊕, R_P = 11.27 ± 1.06 R_⊕, P = 22.3 days), and KOI-94e (M_P = 35^(+18)_(-28) M_⊕, R_P = 6.56 ± 0.62 R_⊕, P = 54.3 days). The radial velocity analyses of KOI-94b and KOI-94e offer marginal (>2σ) mass detections, whereas the observations of KOI-94c offer only an upper limit to its mass. Using the KOI-94 system and other planets with published values for both mass and radius (138 exoplanets total, including 35 with M_P < 150 M_⊕), we establish two fundamental planes for exoplanets that relate their mass, incident flux, and radius from a few Earth masses up to 13 Jupiter masses: (R_P/R_⊕) = 1.78(M_P/M_⊕)0.53(F/erg s^(–1) cm^(–2))^(–0.03) for M_P < 150 M_⊕, and R_P/R_⊕ = 2.45(M_P/M_⊕)^(–0.039)(F/erg s^(–1) cm^(–2))0.094 for M_P > 150 M_⊕. These equations can be used to predict the radius or mass of a planet.

Additional Information

© 2013 American Astronomical Society. Received 2012 October 31; accepted 2013 March 12; published 2013 April 9. Based in part on observations obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory, which is operated by the University of California and the California Institute of Technology. This project was possible thanks to NASA's Kepler mission, which provided the photometry of KOI-94 and identified it as a target worthy of follow-up. The authors thank the Kepler Team as a whole, and also a few individuals for their specific roles: Bill Borucki and David Koch for designing the mission, and Natalie Batalha for leadership in the scientific analysis of the Kepler planetary candidates. L.M.W. thanks Yoram Lithwick for helpful conversations and assistance in interpreting the TTV data. L.M.W. is financially supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program, Grant DGE 1106400. Spectra of KOI-94 were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory. The authors wish to extend special thanks to those of Hawai'ian ancestry on whose sacred mountain of Mauna Kea we are privileged to be guests. Without their generous hospitality, the Keck observations presented herein would not have been possible.

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August 22, 2023
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