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arxiv: 1102.0605 · v1 · pith:T2JXFTRZnew · submitted 2011-02-03 · 🌌 astro-ph.EP

KEPLER's First Rocky Planet: Kepler-10b

Natalie M. Batalha (1) , William J. Borucki (2) , Stephen T. Bryson (2) , Lars A. Buchhave (3) , Douglas A. Caldwell (4) , Jorgen Christensen-Dalsgaard (5 , 23) , David Ciardi (6)
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Edward W. Dunham (7) Francois Fressin (3) Thomas N. Gautier III (8) Ronald L. Gilliland (9) Michael R. Haas (2) Steve B. Howell (10) Jon M. Jenkins (4) Hans Kjeldsen (5) David G. Koch (2) David W. Latham (3) Jack J. Lissauer (2) Geoffrey W. Marcy (11) Jason F. Rowe (2) Dimitar D. Sasselov (3) Sara Seager (12) Jason H. Steffen (13) Guillermo Torres (3) Gibor S. Basri (11) Timothy M. Brown (14) David Charbonneau (3) Jessie Christiansen (2) Bruce Clarke (4) William D. Cochran (15) Andrea Dupree (3) Daniel C. Fabrycky (3) Debra Fischer (16) Eric B. Ford (17) Jonathan Fortney (18) Forrest R. Girouard (19) Matthew J. Holman (3) John Johnson (20) Howard Isaacson (11) Todd C. Klaus (19) Pavel Machalek (4) Althea V. Moorehead (17) Robert C. Morehead (17) Darin Ragozzine (3) Peter Tenenbaum (4) Joseph Twicken (4) Samuel Quinn (3) Jeffrey VanCleve (4) Lucianne M. Walkowicz (11) William F. Welsh (21) Edna Devore (4) Alan Gould (22) ((1) San Jose State University (2) NASA Ames Research Center (3) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (4) SETI Institute (5) Aarhus University (6) NASA Exoplanet Science Institute/Caltech (7) Lowell Observatory (8) Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Caltech (9) Space Telescope Science Institute (10) National Optical Astronomy Observatory (11) University of California Berkeley (12) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (13) Fermilab Center for Particle Astrophysics (14) Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope (15) University of Texas Austin (16) Yale University (17) University of Florida Gainesville (18) University of California Santa Cruz (19) Orbital Sciences Corp. (20) California Institute of Technology (21) San Diego State University (22) Lawrence Hall of Science (23) High Altitude Observatory)
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classification 🌌 astro-ph.EP
keywords kepler-10btransitplanetrockydaysdetecteddimmingdistinct
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NASA's Kepler Mission uses transit photometry to determine the frequency of earth-size planets in or near the habitable zone of Sun-like stars. The mission reached a milestone toward meeting that goal: the discovery of its first rocky planet, Kepler-10b. Two distinct sets of transit events were detected: 1) a 152 +/- 4 ppm dimming lasting 1.811 +/- 0.024 hours with ephemeris T[BJD]=2454964.57375+N*0.837495 days and 2) a 376 +/- 9 ppm dimming lasting 6.86 +/- 0.07 hours with ephemeris T[BJD]=2454971.6761+N*45.29485 days. Statistical tests on the photometric and pixel flux time series established the viability of the planet candidates triggering ground-based follow-up observations. Forty precision Doppler measurements were used to confirm that the short-period transit event is due to a planetary companion. The parent star is bright enough for asteroseismic analysis. Photometry was collected at 1-minute cadence for >4 months from which we detected 19 distinct pulsation frequencies. Modeling the frequencies resulted in precise knowledge of the fundamental stellar properties. Kepler-10 is a relatively old (11.9 +/- 4.5 Gyr) but otherwise Sun-like Main Sequence star with Teff=5627 +/- 44 K, Mstar=0.895 +/- 0.060 Msun, and Rstar=1.056 +/- 0.021 Rsun. Physical models simultaneously fit to the transit light curves and the precision Doppler measurements yielded tight constraints on the properties of Kepler-10b that speak to its rocky composition: Mpl=4.56 +/- 1.29 Mearth, Rpl=1.416 +/- 0.036 Rearth, and density=8.8 +/- 2.9 gcc. Kepler-10b is the smallest transiting exoplanet discovered to date.

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