Kepler 18-b, c, and d: A System Of Three Planets Confirmed by Transit Timing Variations, Lightcurve Validation, Spitzer Photometry and Radial Velocity Measurements
astro-ph.EP
/ Authors
William D. Cochran, Daniel C. Fabrycky, Guillermo Torres, Francois Fressin, Jean-Michel Desert, Darin Ragozzine, Dimitar Sasselov, Jonathan J. Fortney, Jason F. Rowe, Erik J. Brugamyer
and 44 more authors
Stephen T. Bryson, Joshua A. Carter, David R. Ciardi, Steve B. Howell, Jason H. Steffen, William. J. Borucki, David G. Koch, Joshua N. Winn, William F. Welsh, Kamal Uddin, Peter Tenenbaum, M. Still, Sara Seager, Samuel N. Quinn, F. Mullally, Neil Miller, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Phillip J. MacQueen, Philip Lucas, Jack J. Lissauer, David W. Latham, Heather Knutson,
/ Abstract
We report the detection of three transiting planets around a Sunlike star, which we designate Kepler-18. The transit signals were detected in photometric data from the Kepler satellite, and were confirmed to arise from planets using a combination of large transit-timing variations, radial-velocity variations, Warm-Spitzer observations, and statistical analysis of false-positive probabilities. The Kepler-18 star has a mass of 0.97M_sun, radius 1.1R_sun, effective temperature 5345K, and iron abundance [Fe/H]= +0.19. The planets have orbital periods of approximately 3.5, 7.6 and 14.9 days. The innermost planet "b" is a "super-Earth" with mass 6.9 \pm 3.4M_earth, radius 2.00 \pm 0.10R_earth, and mean density 4.9 \pm 2.4 g cm^-3. The two outer planets "c" and "d" are both low-density Neptune-mass planets. Kepler-18c has a mass of 17.3 \pm 1.9M_earth, radius 5.49 \pm 0.26R_earth, and mean density 0.59 \pm 0.07 g cm^-3, while Kepler-18d has a mass of 16.4 \pm 1.4M_earth, radius 6.98 \pm 0.33R_earth, and mean density 0.27 \pm 0.03 g cm^-3. Kepler-18c and Kepler-18d have orbital periods near a 2:1 mean-motion resonance, leading to large and readily detected transit timing variations.