KOI-1019 , the SIMBAD biblio

KOI-1019 , the SIMBAD biblio (41 results) C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.18CEST20:04:11


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Title First 3 Authors
2011ApJ...736...19B viz 15       D               1 1507 867 Characteristics of planetary candidates observed by Kepler. II. Analysis of the first four months of data. BORUCKI W.J., KOCH D.G., BASRI G., et al.
2011ApJ...738..170M viz 15       D               1 997 230 On the low false positive probabilities of Kepler planet candidates. MORTON T.D. and JOHNSON J.A.
2011ApJS..197....2F viz 15       D               1 980 66 Transit timing observations from Kepler. I. Statistical analysis of the first four months. FORD E.B., ROWE J.F., FABRYCKY D.C., et al.
2011ApJ...742L..19M viz 15       D               1 185 37 Compositions of hot super-Earth atmospheres: exploring Kepler candidates. MIGUEL Y., KALTENEGGER L., FEGLEY B., et al.
2012Natur.486..375B viz 15       D               1 378 520 An abundance of small exoplanets around stars with a wide range of metallicities. BUCHHAVE L.A., LATHAM D.W., JOHANSEN A., et al.
2013ApJ...767..127H viz 16       D               1 189 246 Fundamental properties of Kepler planet-candidate host stars using asteroseismology. HUBER D., CHAPLIN W.J., CHRISTENSEN-DALSGAARD J., et al.
2013ApJ...775L..11M viz 16       D               1 2010 189 Stellar rotation periods of the Kepler Objects of Interest: a dearth of close-in planets around fast rotators. McQUILLAN A., MAZEH T. and AIGRAIN S.
2014ApJS..210....1C viz 16       D               1 519 296 Asteroseismic fundamental properties of solar-type stars observed by the NASA Kepler mission. CHAPLIN W.J., BASU S., HUBER D., et al.
2014ApJS..210...19B viz 16       D               1 5860 211 Planetary candidates observed by Kepler IV: planet sample from Q1-Q8 (22 months). BURKE C.J., BRYSON S.T., MULLALLY F., et al.
2014AJ....147..119C viz 16       D               1 8010 91 Contamination in the Kepler field. Identification of 685 KOIs as false positives via ephemeris matching based on Q1-Q12 data. COUGHLIN J.L., THOMPSON S.E., BRYSON S.T., et al.
2014MNRAS.445..946C 81               F     2 6 32 Super-Nyquist asteroseismology of solar-like oscillators with Kepler and K2 - expanding the asteroseismic cohort at the base of the red giant branch. CHAPLIN W.J., ELSWORTH Y., DAVIES G.R., et al.
2015ApJS..217...16R viz 16       D               1 8625 149 Planetary candidates observed by Kepler. V. Planet sample from Q1-Q12 (36 months). ROWE J.F., COUGHLIN J.L., ANTOCI V., et al.
2015ApJ...808..187B viz 16       D               1 540 73 The metallicities of stars with and without transiting planets. BUCHHAVE L.A. and LATHAM D.W.
2016ApJ...823..114N viz 16       D               1 72935 173 Spectroscopic determination of masses (and implied ages) for red giants. NESS M., HOGG D.W., RIX H.-W., et al.
2016AJ....152....8K viz 16       D               1 389 203 The impact of stellar multiplicity on planetary systems. I. The ruinous influence of close binary companions. KRAUS A.L., IRELAND M.J., HUBER D., et al.
2016MNRAS.460.3179W viz 16       D               1 77460 19 Distance and extinction determination for APOGEE stars with Bayesian method. WANG J., SHI J., PAN K., et al.
2017AJ....153...71F viz 57       D     X         2 3575 164 The Kepler follow-up observation program. I. A catalog of companions to Kepler stars from high-resolution imaging. FURLAN E., CIARDI D.R., EVERETT M.E., et al.
2017MNRAS.466.3344E viz 16       D               1 6111 26 A new method for the asteroseismic determination of the evolutionary state of red-giant stars. ELSWORTH Y., HEKKER S., BASU S., et al.
2017ApJ...844..102H viz 16       D               1 2236 180 Asteroseismology and Gaia: testing scaling relations using 2200 Kepler stars with TGAS parallaxes. HUBER D., ZINN J., BOJSEN-HANSEN M., et al.
2017AJ....154..107P viz 16       D               1 1306 226 The California-Kepler Survey. I. High-resolution spectroscopy of 1305 stars hosting Kepler transiting planets. PETIGURA E.A., HOWARD A.W., MARCY G.W., et al.
2017AJ....154..108J viz 16       D               1 3237 137 The California-Kepler Survey. II. Precise physical properties of 2025 Kepler planets and their host stars. JOHNSON J.A., PETIGURA E.A., FULTON B.J., et al.
2017ApJ...847...97S 16       D               1 107 6 Robo-AO Kepler asteroseismic survey. I. Adaptive optics imaging of 99 asteroseismic Kepler dwarfs and subgiants. SCHONHUT-STASIK J.S., BARANEC C., HUBER D., et al.
2017ApJS..233...23S viz 16       D               1 422 94 The first APOKASC catalog of Kepler dwarf and subgiant stars. SERENELLI A., JOHNSON J., HUBER D., et al.
2018AJ....155...68W viz 16       D               1 509 18 Elemental abundances of Kepler Objects of Interest in APOGEE. I. Two distinct orbital period regimes inferred from host star iron abundances. WILSON R.F., TESKE J., MAJEWSKI S.R., et al.
2018ApJ...855..115B viz 16       D               2 1305 5 Identifying young Kepler planet host stars from Keck-HIRES spectra of lithium. BERGER T.A., HOWARD A.W. and BOESGAARD A.M.
2018MNRAS.474.2094A viz 16       D               1 1073 143 Inferring probabilistic stellar rotation periods using Gaussian processes. ANGUS R., MORTON T., AIGRAIN S., et al.
2018ApJ...858...28V viz 16       D               1 459 13 Investigating the metallicity-mixing-length relation. VIANI L.S., BASU S., ONG J.M.J., et al.
2018ApJ...861..149F viz 16       D               2 2261 6 The Kepler Follow-up Observation Program. II. Stellar parameters from medium- and high-resolution spectroscopy. FURLAN E., CIARDI D.R., COCHRAN W.D., et al.
2018ApJS..237...38B viz 16       D               1 1111 42 Spectral properties of cool stars: extended abundance analysis of Kepler Objects of Interest. BREWER J.M. and FISCHER D.A.
2018MNRAS.481.3244G viz 16       D               1 3079 24 Chemo-kinematics of the Milky Way from the SDSS-III MARVELS survey. GRIEVES N., GE J., THOMAS N., et al.
2019MNRAS.482..616B viz 17       D               1 6658 8 Coefficients of variation for detecting solar-like oscillations. BELL K.J., HEKKER S. and KUSZLEWICZ J.S.
2018ApJS..239...32P viz 16       D               1 6680 193 The second APOKASC catalog: the empirical approach. PINSONNEAULT M.H., ELSWORTH Y.P., TAYAR J., et al.
2018ApJS..239...34B 165           X C       3 6 5 A synthetic sample of short-cadence solar-like oscillators for TESS. BALL W.H., CHAPLIN W.J., SCHOFIELD M., et al.
2019ApJS..241...12S viz 17       D               1 25024 61 The Asteroseismic Target list for solar-like oscillators observed in 2 minute cadence with the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite. SCHOFIELD M., CHAPLIN W.J., HUBER D., et al.
2019ApJ...875...29M viz 17       D               1 2918 72 A spectroscopic analysis of the California-Kepler Survey sample. I. Stellar parameters, planetary radii, and a slope in the radius gap. MARTINEZ C.F., CUNHA K., GHEZZI L., et al.
2019ApJ...879...69T viz 17       D               1 222609 141 The Payne: self-consistent ab initio fitting of stellar spectra. TING Y.-S., CONROY C., RIX H.-W., et al.
2019MNRAS.489.4641E viz 17       D               1 6661 ~ Insights from the APOKASC determination of the evolutionary state of red-giant stars by consolidation of different methods. ELSWORTH Y., HEKKER S., JOHNSON J.A., et al.
2020AJ....160..120J viz 17       D               1 365761 238 APOGEE data and spectral analysis from SDSS Data Release 16: seven years of observations including first results from APOGEE-South. JONSSON H., HOLTZMAN J.A., ALLENDE PRIETO C., et al.
2020ApJ...900....4S viz 17       D               1 121537 14 The age distribution of stars in the Milky Way bulge. SIT T. and NESS M.K.
2020ApJS..251...15Z viz 17       D               1 20896 38 Phase II of the LAMOST-Kepler/K2 survey. I. Time series of medium-resolution Spectroscopic observations. ZONG W., FU J.-N., DE CAT P., et al.
2022AJ....163..128W viz 18       D               1 1570 6 The influence of 10 unique chemical elements in shaping the distribution of Kepler planets. WILSON R.F., CANAS C.I., MAJEWSKI S.R., et al.

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