Kepler-434b , the SIMBAD biblio

Kepler-434b , the SIMBAD biblio (29 results) C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.19CEST02:42:32


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Title First 3 Authors
2011PASP..123..412W viz 15       D               1 2897 398 The Exoplanet Orbit Database. WRIGHT J.T., KAKHOURI O., MARCY G.W., 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.
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.
2015A&A...575A..71A 1136 T   A S   X C       26 13 18 SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates. XV.
KOI-614b, KOI-206b, and KOI-680b: a massive warm Jupiter orbiting a G0 metallic dwarf and two highly inflated planets with a distant companion around evolved F-type stars.
ALMENARA J.M., DAMIANI C., BOUCHY F., 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...809....8B viz 16       D               1 112329 282 Terrestrial planet occurrence rates for the Kepler GK dwarf sample. BURKE C.J., CHRISTIANSEN J.L., MULLALLY F., et al.
2015A&A...583L...1O 40           X         1 10 6 Polar stellar-spots and grazing planetary transits. Possible explanation for the low number of discovered grazing planets. OSHAGH M., SANTOS N.C., FIGUEIRA P., et al.
2016A&A...587A..64S viz 40           X         1 179 172 SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates. XVII. The physical properties of giant exoplanets within 400 days of period. SANTERNE A., MOUTOU C., TSANTAKI M., et al.
2016ApJ...822...86M viz 40           X         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.
2016AJ....152...18B viz 16       D               1 1167 34 Robo-AO Kepler planetary candidate survey. II. Adaptive optics imaging of 969 Kepler exoplanet candidate host stars. BARANEC C., ZIEGLER C., LAW N.M., et al.
2016ApJ...825...98H 16       D               1 166 128 Warm jupiters are less lonely than hot jupiters: close neighbors. HUANG C., WU Y. and TRIAUD A.H.M.J.
2016AJ....152..158T viz 16       D               1 4387 37 Detection of potential transit signals in 17 quarters of Kepler data: results of the final Kepler mission transiting planet search (DR25). TWICKEN J.D., JENKINS J.M., SEADER S.E., et al.
2016AJ....152..181H viz 16       D               1 9279 22 SETI observations of exoplanets with the Allen Telescope Array. HARP G.R., RICHARDS J., TARTER J.C., et al.
2017A&A...602A.107B viz 16       D               3 476 185 The GAPS Programme with HARPS-N at TNG. XIV. Investigating giant planet migration history via improved eccentricity and mass determination for 231 transiting planets. BONOMO A.S., DESIDERA S., BENATTI S., et al.
2017A&A...603A..30S viz 16       D               2 2500 58 Observational evidence for two distinct giant planet populations. SANTOS N.C., ADIBEKYAN V., FIGUEIRA P., et al.
2018AJ....155...52A 41           X         1 12 1 Qatar Exoplanet Survey: Qatar-6b- A grazing transiting hot Jupiter. ALSUBAI K., TSVETANOV Z.I., LATHAM D.W., 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.
2018AJ....155..161Z viz 16       D               1 1274 24 Robo-AO Kepler survey. IV. The effect of nearby stars on 3857 planetary candidate systems. ZIEGLER C., LAW N.M., BARANEC C., et al.
2018ApJ...866...99B viz 16       D               1 7129 233 Revised radii of Kepler stars and planet's using Gaia Data Release 2. BERGER T.A., HUBER D., GAIDOS E., et al.
2019ApJ...874L..31T viz 17       D               1 403 62 Connecting giant planet atmosphere and interior modeling: constraints on atmospheric metal enrichment. THORNGREN D. and FORTNEY J.J.
2019AJ....157..171K viz 17       D               1 4069 2 Visual analysis and demographics of Kepler transit timing variations. KANE M., RAGOZZINE D., FLOWERS X., et al.
2019AJ....157..235C viz 17       D               2 415 7 Observations of the Kepler field with TESS: predictions for planet yield and observable features. CHRIST C.N., MONTET B.T. and FABRYCKY D.C.
2019A&A...630A.135U viz 17       D               1 501 16 Beyond the exoplanet mass-radius relation. ULMER-MOLL S., SANTOS N.C., FIGUEIRA P., et al.
2020AJ....159...41T viz 17       D               1 564 ~ Estimating planetary mass with deep learning. TASKER E.J., LANEUVILLE M. and GUTTENBERG N.
2020AJ....160..108B viz 17       D               1 6855 109 The Gaia-Kepler stellar properties catalog. II. Planet radius demographics as a function of stellar mass and age. BERGER T.A., HUBER D., GAIDOS E., et al.
2020AJ....160..229D 43           X         1 30 11 TOI 564 b and TOI 905 b: grazing and fully Transiting hot Jupiters discovered by TESS. DAVIS A.B., WANG S., JONES M., et al.
2020ApJ...904...25L 43           X         1 5 ~ JWST transit spectra. II. Constraining aerosol species, particle-size distributions, temperature, and metallicity for cloudy exoplanets. LACY B.I. and BURROWS A.
2021ApJ...915...41M 44           X         1 6 ~ Variable irradiation on 1D cloudless eccentric exoplanet atmospheres. MAYORGA L.C., ROBINSON T.D., MARLEY M.S., et al.
2024AJ....167...20Z 20       D               1 230 ~ The Breakthrough Listen Search for Intelligent Life: Detection and Characterization of Anomalous Transits in Kepler Lightcurves. ZUCKERMAN A., DAVENPORT J.R.A., CROFT S., et al.

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