Literature DB >> 22237021

Transiting circumbinary planets Kepler-34 b and Kepler-35 b.

William F Welsh1, Jerome A Orosz, Joshua A Carter, Daniel C Fabrycky, Eric B Ford, Jack J Lissauer, Andrej Prša, Samuel N Quinn, Darin Ragozzine, Donald R Short, Guillermo Torres, Joshua N Winn, Laurance R Doyle, Thomas Barclay, Natalie Batalha, Steven Bloemen, Erik Brugamyer, Lars A Buchhave, Caroline Caldwell, Douglas A Caldwell, Jessie L Christiansen, David R Ciardi, William D Cochran, Michael Endl, Jonathan J Fortney, Thomas N Gautier, Ronald L Gilliland, Michael R Haas, Jennifer R Hall, Matthew J Holman, Andrew W Howard, Steve B Howell, Howard Isaacson, Jon M Jenkins, Todd C Klaus, David W Latham, Jie Li, Geoffrey W Marcy, Tsevi Mazeh, Elisa V Quintana, Paul Robertson, Avi Shporer, Jason H Steffen, Gur Windmiller, David G Koch, William J Borucki.   

Abstract

Most Sun-like stars in the Galaxy reside in gravitationally bound pairs of stars (binaries). Although long anticipated, the existence of a 'circumbinary planet' orbiting such a pair of normal stars was not definitively established until the discovery of the planet transiting (that is, passing in front of) Kepler-16. Questions remained, however, about the prevalence of circumbinary planets and their range of orbital and physical properties. Here we report two additional transiting circumbinary planets: Kepler-34 (AB)b and Kepler-35 (AB)b, referred to here as Kepler-34 b and Kepler-35 b, respectively. Each is a low-density gas-giant planet on an orbit closely aligned with that of its parent stars. Kepler-34 b orbits two Sun-like stars every 289 days, whereas Kepler-35 b orbits a pair of smaller stars (89% and 81% of the Sun's mass) every 131 days. The planets experience large multi-periodic variations in incident stellar radiation arising from the orbital motion of the stars. The observed rate of circumbinary planets in our sample implies that more than ∼1% of close binary stars have giant planets in nearly coplanar orbits, yielding a Galactic population of at least several million.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22237021     DOI: 10.1038/nature10768

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  4 in total

1.  Kepler planet-detection mission: introduction and first results.

Authors:  William J Borucki; David Koch; Gibor Basri; Natalie Batalha; Timothy Brown; Douglas Caldwell; John Caldwell; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; William D Cochran; Edna DeVore; Edward W Dunham; Andrea K Dupree; Thomas N Gautier; John C Geary; Ronald Gilliland; Alan Gould; Steve B Howell; Jon M Jenkins; Yoji Kondo; David W Latham; Geoffrey W Marcy; Søren Meibom; Hans Kjeldsen; Jack J Lissauer; David G Monet; David Morrison; Dimitar Sasselov; Jill Tarter; Alan Boss; Don Brownlee; Toby Owen; Derek Buzasi; David Charbonneau; Laurance Doyle; Jonathan Fortney; Eric B Ford; Matthew J Holman; Sara Seager; Jason H Steffen; William F Welsh; Jason Rowe; Howard Anderson; Lars Buchhave; David Ciardi; Lucianne Walkowicz; William Sherry; Elliott Horch; Howard Isaacson; Mark E Everett; Debra Fischer; Guillermo Torres; John Asher Johnson; Michael Endl; Phillip MacQueen; Stephen T Bryson; Jessie Dotson; Michael Haas; Jeffrey Kolodziejczak; Jeffrey Van Cleve; Hema Chandrasekaran; Joseph D Twicken; Elisa V Quintana; Bruce D Clarke; Christopher Allen; Jie Li; Haley Wu; Peter Tenenbaum; Ekaterina Verner; Frederick Bruhweiler; Jason Barnes; Andrej Prsa
Journal:  Science       Date:  2010-01-07       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  KOI-126: a triply eclipsing hierarchical triple with two low-mass stars.

Authors:  Joshua A Carter; Daniel C Fabrycky; Darin Ragozzine; Matthew J Holman; Samuel N Quinn; David W Latham; Lars A Buchhave; Jeffrey Van Cleve; William D Cochran; Miles T Cote; Michael Endl; Eric B Ford; Michael R Haas; Jon M Jenkins; David G Koch; Jie Li; Jack J Lissauer; Phillip J MacQueen; Christopher K Middour; Jerome A Orosz; Jason F Rowe; Jason H Steffen; William F Welsh
Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-01-11       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Kepler-16: a transiting circumbinary planet.

Authors:  Laurance R Doyle; Joshua A Carter; Daniel C Fabrycky; Robert W Slawson; Steve B Howell; Joshua N Winn; Jerome A Orosz; Andrej Prša; William F Welsh; Samuel N Quinn; David Latham; Guillermo Torres; Lars A Buchhave; Geoffrey W Marcy; Jonathan J Fortney; Avi Shporer; Eric B Ford; Jack J Lissauer; Darin Ragozzine; Michael Rucker; Natalie Batalha; Jon M Jenkins; William J Borucki; David Koch; Christopher K Middour; Jennifer R Hall; Sean McCauliff; Michael N Fanelli; Elisa V Quintana; Matthew J Holman; Douglas A Caldwell; Martin Still; Robert P Stefanik; Warren R Brown; Gilbert A Esquerdo; Sumin Tang; Gabor Furesz; John C Geary; Perry Berlind; Michael L Calkins; Donald R Short; Jason H Steffen; Dimitar Sasselov; Edward W Dunham; William D Cochran; Alan Boss; Michael R Haas; Derek Buzasi; Debra Fischer
Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-09-16       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Habitable zones around main sequence stars.

Authors:  J F Kasting; D P Whitmire; R T Reynolds
Journal:  Icarus       Date:  1993-01       Impact factor: 3.508

  4 in total
  4 in total

1.  Astronomy: A new class of planet.

Authors:  John Southworth
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-01-11       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Survival of planets around shrinking stellar binaries.

Authors:  Diego J Muñoz; Dong Lai
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-07-09       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  TATOOINE'S FUTURE: THE ECCENTRIC RESPONSE OF KEPLER'S CIRCUMBINARY PLANETS TO COMMON-ENVELOPE EVOLUTION OF THEIR HOST STARS.

Authors:  Veselin B Kostov; Keavin Moore; Daniel Tamayo; Ray Jayawardhana; Stephen A Rinehart
Journal:  Astrophys J       Date:  2016-11-30       Impact factor: 5.874

4.  Climate variations on Earth-like circumbinary planets.

Authors:  Max Popp; Siegfried Eggl
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-04-06       Impact factor: 14.919

  4 in total

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