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Published February 20, 2015 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Validation of 12 Small Kepler Transiting Planets in the Habitable Zone

Abstract

We present an investigation of 12 candidate transiting planets from Kepler with orbital periods ranging from 34 to 207 days, selected from initial indications that they are small and potentially in the habitable zone (HZ) of their parent stars. Few of these objects are known. The expected Doppler signals are too small to confirm them by demonstrating that their masses are in the planetary regime. Here we verify their planetary nature by validating them statistically using the BLENDER technique, which simulates large numbers of false positives and compares the resulting light curves with the Kepler photometry. This analysis was supplemented with new follow-up observations (high-resolution optical and near-infrared spectroscopy, adaptive optics imaging, and speckle interferometry), as well as an analysis of the flux centroids. For 11 of them (KOI-0571.05, 1422.04, 1422.05, 2529.02, 3255.01, 3284.01, 4005.01, 4087.01, 4622.01, 4742.01, and 4745.01) we show that the likelihood they are true planets is far greater than that of a false positive, to a confidence level of 99.73% (3σ) or higher. For KOI-4427.01 the confidence level is about 99.2% (2.6σ). With our accurate characterization of the GKM host stars, the derived planetary radii range from 1.1 to 2.7 R_⊕. All 12 objects are confirmed to be in the HZ, and nine are small enough to be rocky. Excluding three of them that have been previously validated by others, our study doubles the number of known rocky planets in the HZ. KOI-3284.01 (Kepler-438b) and KOI-4742.01 (Kepler-442b) are the planets most similar to the Earth discovered to date when considering their size and incident flux jointly.

Additional Information

© 2015 American Astronomical Society. Received 2014 September 29; accepted 2014 December 16; published 2015 February 18. We thank the referee for helpful comments on the original manuscript. This paper includes data collected by the Kepler spacecraft. Funding for the Kepler Mission is provided by NASA's Science Mission Directorate. The research has also made use of the Michael Dodds Computing Facility, of NASA's Astrophysics Data System (ADS), and of data products from the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST). Some of the data presented herein were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory, which is operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and NASA. We extend special thanks to those of Hawaiian ancestry on whose sacred mountain of Mauna Kea we are privileged to be guests. G.T. acknowledges partial support for this work from NASA grant NNX14AB83G (Kepler Participating Scientist Program). D.M.K. is supported by the Harvard College Observatory Menzel Fellowship.

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Published - 0004-637X_800_2_99.pdf

Submitted - 1501.01101v2.pdf

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 20, 2023