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Published April 2017 | Published + Submitted + Erratum
Journal Article Open

Revised Stellar Properties of Kepler Targets for the Q1-17 (DR25) Transit Detection Run

Abstract

The determination of exoplanet properties and occurrence rates using Kepler data critically depends on our knowledge of the fundamental properties (such as temperature, radius, and mass) of the observed stars. We present revised stellar properties for 197,096 Kepler targets observed between Quarters 1–17 (Q1-17), which were used for the final transiting planet search run by the Kepler Mission (Data Release 25, DR25). Similar to the Q1–16 catalog by Huber et al., the classifications are based on conditioning published atmospheric parameters on a grid of Dartmouth isochrones, with significant improvements in the adopted method and over 29,000 new sources for temperatures, surface gravities, or metallicities. In addition to fundamental stellar properties, the new catalog also includes distances and extinctions, and we provide posterior samples for each stellar parameter of each star. Typical uncertainties are ~27% in radius, ~17% in mass, and ~51% in density, which is somewhat smaller than previous catalogs because of the larger number of improved $\mathrm{log}g$ constraints and the inclusion of isochrone weighting when deriving stellar posterior distributions. On average, the catalog includes a significantly larger number of evolved solar-type stars, with an increase of 43.5% in the number of subgiants. We discuss the overall changes of radii and masses of Kepler targets as a function of spectral type, with a particular focus on exoplanet host stars.

Additional Information

© 2017. The American Astronomical Society. Received 2016 September 12; revised 2016 December 21; accepted 2016 December 22; published 2017 March 29. The authors would like to thank Michael Haas and Eric Gaidos for useful discussions. S.M. would like to thank R. A. García and the CEA Saclay (France) for their computing resources. S.M. and D.H. acknowledge support by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration under Grant NNX14AB92G issued through the Kepler Participating Scientist Program, and D.H. acknowledges support by the Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects funding scheme (project number DE140101364). F.B. is supported by NASA through Hubble Fellowship grant #HST-HF2-51335 awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., for NASA, under contract NAS5-26555.

Attached Files

Published - Mathur_2017_ApJS_229_30.pdf

Submitted - 1609.04128.pdf

Erratum - Mathur_2018_ApJS_234_43.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023