Kepler-14b , the SIMBAD biblio

Kepler-14b , the SIMBAD biblio (61 results) C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.19CEST23:25:00


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Title First 3 Authors
2011ApJS..197....3B 764 T K A     X C       18 2 44 Kepler-14b: a massive hot Jupiter transiting an F star in a close visual binary. BUCHHAVE L.A., LATHAM D.W., CARTER J.A., et al.
2012A&A...540A..99E 15       D               5 123 55 Factors affecting the radii of close-in transiting exoplanets. ENOCH B., COLLIER CAMERON A. and HORNE K.
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.
2012ApJ...756..185F viz 15       D               1 1856 44 Transit timing observations from Kepler. V. Transit timing variation candidates in the first sixteen months from polynomial models. FORD E.B., RAGOZZINE D., ROWE J.F., et al.
2012ApJ...761....6M 18       D               1 31 210 An efficient automated validation procedure for exoplanet transit candidates. MORTON T.D.
2011PASP..123..412W viz 15       D               1 2897 398 The Exoplanet Orbit Database. WRIGHT J.T., KAKHOURI O., MARCY G.W., et al.
2013ApJ...764...18L viz 16       D               1 174 6 Pulsation frequencies and modes of giant exoplanets. LE BIHAN B. and BURROWS A.
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.
2013ApJ...766....9S viz 16       D               1 538 31 An ultraviolet investigation of activity on exoplanet host stars. SHKOLNIK E.L.
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.
2013A&A...552A.119S viz 16       D               1 1487 118 Magnetic energy fluxes in sub-Alfvenic planet star and moon planet interactions. SAUR J., GRAMBUSCH T., DULING S., et al.
2013A&A...554A.114H 79           X         2 13 26 KOI-200 b and KOI-889 b: two transiting exoplanets detected and characterized with Kepler, SOPHIE, and HARPS-N. HEBRARD G., ALMENARA J.-M., SANTERNE A., et al.
2013AJ....146....9A 39           X         1 29 57 Adaptive optics images. II. 12 Kepler objects of interest and 15 confirmed transiting planets. ADAMS E.R., DUPREE A.K., KULESA C., et al.
2013ApJ...773...98B 39           X         1 49 29 Exoplanet characterization by proxy: a transiting 2.15 RPlanet near the habitable zone of the late K dwarf Kepler-61. BALLARD S., CHARBONNEAU D., FRESSIN F., et al.
2013ApJ...777..100H 58       D     X         2 12 72 Understanding trends associated with clouds in irradiated exoplanets. HENG K. and DEMORY B.-O.
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.
2014A&A...562A.140P 39           X         1 9 13 Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission. XXV. CoRoT-27b: a massive and dense planet on a short-period orbit. PARVIAINEN H., GANDOLFI D., DELEUIL M., et al.
2014AJ....147...84B viz 39           X         1 6 9 HAT-P-49b: a 1.7 MJ planet transiting a bright 1.5 MF-star. BIERYLA A., HARTMAN J.D., BAKOS G.A., et al.
2014ApJ...788..148S 17       D               2 11 40 A high false positive rate for Kepler planetary candidates of giant stars using asterodensity profiling. SLISKI D.H. and KIPPING D.M.
2014ApJ...789L..20D 39           X         1 32 31 The albedos of Kepler's close-in super-earths. DEMORY B.-O.
2014ApJ...790...12B 39           X         1 32 37 Kepler-93b: a terrestrial world measured to within 120 km, and a test case for a new Spitzer observing mode. BALLARD S., CHAPLIN W.J., CHARBONNEAU D., et al.
2014ApJ...791...35L viz 16       D               2 800 137 Robotic laser adaptive optics imaging of 715 Kepler exoplanet candidates using Robo-AO. LAW N.M., MORTON T., BARANEC C., et al.
2014ApJ...794....3V 45           X         1 12 150 Hot jupiters and cool stars. VILLAVER E., LIVIO M., MUSTILL A.J., et al.
2014ApJ...796...48Z viz 16       D               1 199 11 The ground-based H-, K-, and L-band absolute emission spectra of HD 209458b. ZELLEM R.T., GRIFFITH C.A., DEROO P., et al.
2014MNRAS.445.4395Y viz 16       D               1 192 1 On the structure and evolution of planets and their host stars - effects of various heating mechanisms on the size of giant gas planets. YILDIZ M., CELIK ORHAN Z., KAYHAN C., et al.
2015ApJ...798...66D 40           X         1 296 60 The photoeccentric effect and proto-hot jupiters. III. A paucity of proto-hot jupiters on super-eccentric orbits. DAWSON R.I., MURRAY-CLAY R.A. and JOHNSON J.A.
2015ApJS..217...16R viz 95       D       C       9 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...804...59D 214       D     X         6 83 29 Low false positive rate of Kepler candidates estimated from a combination of Spitzer and follow-up observations. DESERT J.-M., CHARBONNEAU D., TORRES G., et al.
2015ApJ...806..248W viz 16       D               1 143 44 Influence of stellar multiplicity on planet formation. III. Adaptive optics imaging of Kepler stars with gas giant planets. WANG J., FISCHER D.A., HORCH E.P., et al.
2015PASP..127.1021W 40           X         1 50 5 The Weihai Observatory search for close-in planets orbiting giant stars. WITTENMYER R.A., GAO D., HU S.M., et al.
2015ApJ...814...81H 175       D     X         5 22 10 A search for ringed exoplanets using Kepler photometry. HEISING M.Z., MARCY G.W. and SCHLICHTING H.E.
2015PASP..127.1113A 397       S   X C       8 59 102 A comprehensive study of Kepler phase curves and secondary eclipses: temperatures and Albedos of confirmed Kepler giant planets. ANGERHAUSEN D., DELARME E. and MORSE J.A.
2016ApJ...820...93S 16       D               1 52 19 The eccentricity distribution of short-period planet candidates detected by Kepler in occultation. SHABRAM M., DEMORY B.-O., CISEWSKI J., 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.
2016MNRAS.460.3598S 82               F     1 9 25 New prospects for observing and cataloguing exoplanets in well-detached binaries. SCHWARZ R., FUNK B., ZECHNER R., et al.
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.
2017ApJ...834...17C viz 17       D               1 290 454 Probabilistic forecasting of the masses and radii of other worlds. CHEN J. and KIPPING D.
2016PASP..128f4401T viz 40           X         1 23 6 WASP-120 b, WASP-122 b, AND WASP-123 b: three newly discovered planets from the WASP-South survey. TURNER O.D., ANDERSON D.R., COLLIER CAMERON A., et al.
2016PASP..128g4503P 16       D               1 17 7 Combining photometry from Kepler and TESS to improve short-period Exoplanet characterization. PLACEK B., KNUTH K.H. and ANGERHAUSEN D.
2017AJ....154...66F 179       D     X         5 90 6 The densities of planets in multiple stellar systems. FURLAN E. and HOWELL S.B.
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.
2017AJ....154..228S viz 179       D     X         5 95 4 Know the planet, know the star: precise stellar densities from Kepler transit light curves. SANDFORD E. and KIPPING D.
2018ApJ...856...37B 16       D               1 170 43 Jupiter analogs orbit stars with an average metallicity close to that of the Sun. BUCHHAVE L.A., BITSCH B., JOHANSEN A., 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.
2018AJ....155..206A viz 16       D               3 183 5 Systematic search for rings around Kepler planet candidates: constraints on ring size and occurrence rate. AIZAWA M., MASUDA K., KAWAHARA H., et al.
2018MNRAS.473.1801G 16       D               1 78 1 Exoplanet phase curves at large phase angles. Diagnostics for extended hazy atmospheres. GARCIA MUNOZ A. and CABRERA J.
2019AJ....157...61V 60       D     X         2 110 147 The orbital eccentricity of small planet systems. VAN EYLEN V., ALBRECHT S., HUANG X., et al.
2019RAA....19...41G viz 17       D               1 1982 17 Transit timing variations and linear ephemerides of confirmed Kepler transiting exoplanets. GAJDOS P., VANKO M. and PARIMUCHA S.
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.
2020AJ....159...41T viz 17       D               1 564 ~ Estimating planetary mass with deep learning. TASKER E.J., LANEUVILLE M. and GUTTENBERG N.
2020A&A...638A.143A 17       D               1 193 ~ Variability of transit light curves of Kepler objects of interest. ARKHYPOV O.V., KHODACHENKO M.L. and HANSLMEIER A.
2020AJ....160..194T 43           X         1 39 ~ Impact of tides on the potential for exoplanets to host exomoons. TOKADJIAN A. and PIRO A.L.
2021A&A...645A...7K viz 17       D               1 1569 17 Determining the true mass of radial-velocity exoplanets with Gaia. Nine planet candidates in the brown dwarf or stellar regime and 27 confirmed planets. KIEFER F., HEBRARD G., LECAVELIER DES ETANGS A., et al.
2021MNRAS.503.4092B 17       D               2 124 ~ Revisiting the Kepler field with TESS: Improved ephemerides using TESS 2 min data. BATTLEY M.P., KUNIMOTO M., ARMSTRONG D.J., et al.
2021ApJS..254...39G viz 17       D               1 2256 165 The TESS Objects of Interest Catalog from the TESS Prime Mission. GUERRERO N.M., SEAGER S., HUANG C.X., et al.
2022AJ....164...56L 63       D     X         2 46 ~ Determining Which Binary Component Hosts the TESS Transiting Planet. LESTER K.V., HOWELL S.B., CIARDI D.R., et al.
2022ApJS..261...26S viz 18       D               3 1893 2 Magnetic Activity and Physical Parameters of Exoplanet Host Stars Based on LAMOST DR7, TESS, Kepler, and K2 Surveys. SU T., ZHANG L.-Y., LONG L., 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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