On the Low False Positive Probabilities of Kepler Planet Candidates
Timothy D. Morton, John Asher Johnson

TL;DR
This paper introduces a conservative probabilistic framework to estimate false positive rates for Kepler planet candidates, aiding in validation and population studies without immediate ground-based follow-up.
Contribution
It provides a new Monte Carlo-based method to calculate false positive probabilities for Kepler candidates, incorporating stellar and Galactic models for prior assessment.
Findings
Most candidates have FPP <10%.
Deep high-resolution imaging significantly reduces FPP for Earth-sized candidates.
Shallow AO imaging and spectroscopy are effective for super-Earth and Neptune-sized candidates.
Abstract
We present a framework to conservatively estimate the probability that any particular planet-like transit signal observed by the Kepler mission is in fact a planet, prior to any ground-based follow-up efforts. We use Monte Carlo methods based on stellar population synthesis and Galactic structure models, and report a priori false positive probabilities for every Kepler Object of Interest in tabular form, assuming a 20% intrinsic occurrence rate of close-in planets in the radius range 0.5 Rearth < Rp < 20 Rearth. Almost every candidate has FPP <10%, and over half have FPP <5%. This probability varies most strongly with the magnitude and Galactic latitude of the Kepler target star, and more weakly with transit depth. We establish that a single deep high-resolution image will be an extremely effective follow-up tool for the shallowest (Earth-sized) transits, providing the quickest route…
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