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Published March 2016 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Kepler Eclipsing Binary Stars. VII. The Catalog of Eclipsing Binaries Found in the Entire Kepler Data Set

Abstract

The primary Kepler Mission provided nearly continuous monitoring of ~200,000 objects with unprecedented photometric precision. We present the final catalog of eclipsing binary systems within the 105 deg^2 Kepler field of view. This release incorporates the full extent of the data from the primary mission (Q0-Q17 Data Release). As a result, new systems have been added, additional false positives have been removed, ephemerides and principal parameters have been recomputed, classifications have been revised to rely on analytical models, and eclipse timing variations have been computed for each system. We identify several classes of systems including those that exhibit tertiary eclipse events, systems that show clear evidence of additional bodies, heartbeat systems, systems with changing eclipse depths, and systems exhibiting only one eclipse event over the duration of the mission. We have updated the period and galactic latitude distribution diagrams and included a catalog completeness evaluation. The total number of identified eclipsing and ellipsoidal binary systems in the Kepler field of view has increased to 2878, 1.3% of all observed Kepler targets. An online version of this catalog with downloadable content and visualization tools is maintained athttp://keplerEBs.villanova.edu.

Additional Information

© 2016 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2015 June 6; accepted 2015 November 16; published 2016 February 23. All of the data presented in this paper were obtained from the Multimission Archive at the Space Telescope Science Institute (MAST). STScI is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS5-26555. Support for MAST for non-Hubble Space Telescope data is provided by the NASA Office of Space Science via grant NNX09AF08G and by other grants and contracts. Funding for this Discovery Mission is provided by NASAs Science Mission Directorate. Spectroscopic follow-up data are made available through NOAO survey program 11A-0022. This work is funded in part by the NASA/SETI subcontract 08-SC-1041 and NSF RUI AST-05-07542. B.Q. was supported by an appointment to the NASA Postdoctoral Program at the Ames Research Center, administered by Oak Ridge Associated Universities through a contract with NASA. T.S.B. acknowledges support from ADAP14-0245 and ADAP12-0172. A.D. has been supported by the Postdoctoral Fellowship Programme of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the János Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Lendület-2009 Young Researchers Programme of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the European Communitys Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no. 269194 (IRSES/ASK) and no. 312844 (SPACEINN). A. D. has also been supported by the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office—NKFIH K-1157709. Facility: Kepler - The Kepler Mission.

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Published - Kirk_2016_AJ_151_68.pdf

Submitted - 1512.08830.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023