Characterizing the cool KOIs. III. KOI 961: A small star with large proper motion and three small planets

  • Philip S. Muirhead
  • , John Asher Johnson
  • , Kevin Apps
  • , Joshua A. Carter
  • , Timothy D. Morton
  • , Daniel C. Fabrycky
  • , John Sebastian Pineda
  • , Michael Bottom
  • , Bárbara Rojas-Ayala
  • , Everett Schlawin
  • , Katherine Hamren
  • , Kevin R. Covey
  • , Justin R. Crepp
  • , Keivan G. Stassun
  • , Joshua Pepper
  • , Leslie Hebb
  • , Evan N. Kirby
  • , Andrew W. Howard
  • , Howard T. Isaacson
  • , Geoffrey W. Marcy
  • David Levitan, Tanio Diaz-Santos, Lee Armus, James P. Lloyd

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

192 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

We characterize the star KOI 961, an M dwarf with transit signals indicative of three short-period exoplanets discovered by the Kepler mission. We proceed by comparing KOI 961 to Barnard's Star, a nearby, well-characterized mid-M dwarf. We compare colors, optical and near-infrared spectra, and find remarkable agreement between the two, implying similar effective temperatures and metallicities. Both are metal-poor compared to the Solar neighborhood, have low projected rotational velocity, high absolute radial velocity, large proper motion, and no quiescent Hα emission - all of which are consistent with being old M dwarfs. We combine empirical measurements of Barnard's Star and expectations from evolutionary isochrones to estimate KOI 961's mass (0.13 ± 0.05 M ), radius (0.17 ± 0.04 R ), and luminosity (2.40 × 10-3.0 ± 0.3 L ). We calculate KOI 961's distance (38.7 ± 6.3 pc) and space motions, which, like Barnard's Star, are consistent with a high scale-height population in the Milky Way. We perform an independent multi-transit fit to the public Kepler light curve and significantly revise the transit parameters for the three planets. We calculate the false-positive probability for each planet candidate, and find a less than 1% chance that any one of the transiting signals is due to a background or hierarchical eclipsing binary, validating the planetary nature of the transits. The best-fitting radii for all three planets are less than 1R , with KOI 961.03 being Mars-sized (RP = 0.57 ± 0.18 R ), and they represent some of the smallest exoplanets detected to date.

Idioma originalInglés
Número de artículo144
PublicaciónAstrophysical Journal
Volumen747
N.º2
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 10 mar. 2012
Publicado de forma externa

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