Litcius/Paper detail

A Habitable-zone Earth-sized Planet Rescued from False Positive Status

Andrew Vanderburg, Pamela Rowden, Steve Bryson, Jeffrey L. Coughlin, Natalie M. Batalha, Karen A. Collins, David W. Latham, Susan E. Mullally, Knicole D. Colón, Chris Henze, Chelsea X. Huang, Samuel N. Quinn

2020The Astrophysical Journal Letters24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We report the discovery of an Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone of a low-mass star called Kepler-1649. The planet, Kepler-1649 c, is 1.06 times the size of Earth and transits its 0.1977 ± 0.0051 “mid” M-dwarf host star every 19.5 days. It receives 74% ± 3% the incident flux of Earth, giving it an equilibrium temperature of 234 ± 20 K and placing it firmly inside the circumstellar habitable zone. Kepler-1649 also hosts a previously known inner planet that orbits every 8.7 days and is roughly equivalent to Venus in size and incident flux. Kepler-1649 c was originally classified as a false positive (FP) by the Kepler pipeline, but was rescued as part of a systematic visual inspection of all automatically dispositioned Kepler FPs. This discovery highlights the value of human inspection of planet candidates even as automated techniques improve, and hints that terrestrial planets around mid to late M-dwarfs may be more common than those around more massive stars.

Topics & Concepts

PlanetCircumstellar habitable zoneKeplerPhysicsAstrobiologyAstronomyKepler-69cHabitability of orange dwarf systemsTerrestrial planetKepler-47StarsPlanetary habitabilityAstrophysicsExoplanetPlanetary migrationStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesAstro and Planetary ScienceAstronomy and Astrophysical Research