KOI-1681 , the SIMBAD biblio

KOI-1681 , the SIMBAD biblio (40 results) C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.19CEST03:05:06


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Title First 3 Authors
2012ApJS..199...24T viz 15       D               1 5394 66 Detection of potential transit signals in the first three quarters of Kepler mission data. TENENBAUM P., CHRISTIANSEN J.L., JENKINS J.M., et al.
2013ApJS..204...24B viz 16       D               1 3274 922 Planetary candidates observed by Kepler. III. Analysis of the first 16 months of data. BATALHA N.M., ROWE J.F., BRYSON S.T., et al.
2013MNRAS.429.2001H viz 16       D               1 140 33 150 new transiting planet candidates from Kepler Q1-Q6 data. HUANG X., BAKOS G.A. and HARTMAN J.D.
2013ApJ...767...95D viz 17       D               1 164 581 The occurrence rate of small planets around small stars. DRESSING C.D. and CHARBONNEAU D.
2013ApJ...770...43M viz 16       D               1 202 41 Testing the metal of late-type Kepler planet hosts with iron-clad methods. MANN A.W., GAIDOS E., KRAUS A., et al.
2013A&A...555A..58O viz 16       D               2 171 53 An independent planet search in the Kepler dataset. I. One hundred new candidates and revised Kepler objects of interest. OFIR A. and DREIZLER S.
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.
2013ApJS..208...16M viz 16       D               1 1518 139 Transit timing observations from Kepler. VIII. Catalog of transit timing measurements of the first twelve quarters. MAZEH T., NACHMANI G., HOLCZER T., et al.
2013MNRAS.436.1883W viz 16       D               1 961 136 Rotation periods, variability properties and ages for Kepler exoplanet candidate host stars. WALKOWICZ L.M. and BASRI G.S.
2013ApJ...779..188M viz 16       D               1 342 155 Spectro-thermometry of M dwarfs and their candidate planets: too hot, too cool, or just right? MANN A.W., GAIDOS E. and ANSDELL M.
2013A&A...560A...4R viz 16       D               1 24132 291 Rotation and differential rotation of active Kepler stars. REINHOLD T., REINERS A. and BASRI G.
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.
2014ApJS..213....5M viz 16       D               1 111 51 Characterizing the cool KOIs. VI. H- and K-band spectra of Kepler M dwarf planet-candidate hosts. MUIRHEAD P.S., BECKER J., FEIDEN G.A., et al.
2015ApJ...800...85N viz 16       D               3 525 94 An empirical calibration to estimate cool dwarf fundamental parameters from H-band spectra. NEWTON E.R., CHARBONNEAU D., IRWIN J., et al.
2015ApJ...801....3M viz 16       D               1 3357 109 Photometric amplitude distribution of stellar rotation of KOIs–Indication for spin-orbit alignment of cool stars and high obliquity for hot stars. MAZEH T., PERETS H.B., McQUILLAN A., et al.
2015ApJ...801...18M 40           X         1 31 39 Kepler-445, Kepler-446 and the occurrence of compact multiples orbiting mid-M dwarf stars. MUIRHEAD P.S., MANN A.W., VANDERBURG A., 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.
2015ApJS..217...18S viz 40           X         1 16 16 Detection of potential transit signals in 17 quarters of Kepler mission data. SEADER S., JENKINS J.M., TENENBAUM P., et al.
2015MNRAS.448.3608B viz 16       D               2 156 6 Using the inclinations of Kepler systems to prioritize new Titius-Bode-based exoplanet predictions. BOVAIRD T., LINEWEAVER C.H. and JACOBSEN S.K.
2015ApJS..218...26S viz 16       D               1 275 13 Characterizing the cool KOIs. VIII. Parameters of the planets orbiting Kepler's coolest dwarfs. SWIFT J.J., MONTET B.T., VANDERBURG A., et al.
2015ApJ...807..170H viz 16       D               1 2117 10 Time variation of Kepler transits induced by stellar Spots–A way to distinguish between prograde and retrograde motion. II. Application to KOIs. HOLCZER T., SHPORER A., MAZEH T., et al.
2015ApJ...807...45D viz 1366       D     X C       34 2707 726 The occurrence of potentially habitable planets orbiting M dwarfs estimated from the full Kepler dataset and an empirical measurement of the detection sensitivity. DRESSING C.D. and CHARBONNEAU D.
2015ApJ...814...91B viz 16       D               1 524 24 Comparative habitability of transiting exoplanets. BARNES R., MEADOWS V.S. and EVANS N.
2015ApJ...814..130M viz 16       D               3 2846 162 An increase in the mass of planetary systems around lower-mass stars. MULDERS G.D., PASCUCCI I. and APAI D.
2016ApJ...821...47B viz 16       D               1 217 14 Efficient geometric probabilities of multi-transiting exoplanetary systems from CORBITS. BRAKENSIEK J. and RAGOZZINE D.
2016ApJ...822...86M viz 16       D               1 6130 337 False positive probabilities for all Kepler objects of interest: 1284 newly validated planets and 428 likely false positives. MORTON T.D., BRYSON S.T., COUGHLIN J.L., et al.
2016ApJS..224...12C viz 136       D S   X         3 1110 211 Planetary candidates observed by Kepler VII. The first fully uniform catalog based on the entire 48-month data set (Q1-Q17 DR24). COUGHLIN J.L., MULLALLY F., THOMPSON S.E., et al.
2016MNRAS.457.2877G viz 16       D               1 4245 141 They are small worlds after all: revised properties of Kepler M dwarf stars and their planets. GAIDOS E., MANN A.W., KRAUS A.L., et al.
2016AJ....152....8K viz 16       D               2 389 203 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.
2016ApJS..225....9H viz 16       D               1 2132 124 Transit timing observations from Kepler. IX. Catalog of the full long-cadence data set. HOLCZER T., MAZEH T., NACHMANI G., et al.
2017AJ....153...66Z viz 57       D     X         2 1663 45 Robo-AO Kepler Planetary Candidate Survey. III. Adaptive optics imaging of 1629 Kepler exoplanet candidate host stars. ZIEGLER C., LAW N.M., MORTON T., et al.
2017AJ....153...71F viz 16       D               1 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.
2017AJ....153..117H viz 16       D               1 170 51 Assessing the effect of stellar companions from high-resolution imaging of Kepler Objects of Interest. HIRSCH L.A., CIARDI D.R., HOWARD A.W., et al.
2017MNRAS.465.2634A viz 16       D               2 5400 21 Transit shapes and self-organizing maps as a tool for ranking planetary candidates: application to Kepler and K2. ARMSTRONG D.J., POLLACCO D. and SANTERNE A.
2018ApJS..234....9O viz 16       D               1 436 14 A spectral approach to transit timing variations. OFIR A., XIE J.-W., JIANG C.-F., et al.
2019AJ....158..177Q viz 44           X         1 19 43 Near-resonance in a system of sub-Neptunes from TESS. QUINN S.N., BECKER J.C., RODRIGUEZ J.E., et al.
2020ApJ...890...23L viz 17       D               4 4935 35 Current population statistics do not favor photoevaporation over core-powered mass loss as the dominant cause of the exoplanet radius gap. LOYD R.O.P., SHKOLNIK E.L., SCHNEIDER A.C., et al.
2022ApJ...935..141S 242       D     X C       5 9 3 Revising Properties of Planet-Host Binary Systems. I. Methods and Pilot Study. SULLIVAN K., KRAUS A.L. and MANN A.W.
2023AJ....166...28V 19       D               1 129 1 Multiplicity Boost of Transit Signal Classifiers: Validation of 69 New Exoplanets using the Multiplicity Boost of ExoMiner. VALIZADEGAN H., MARTINHO M.J.S., JENKINS J.M., et al.

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