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), Edward W. Dunham (7), Francois Fressin (3), Thomas, N. Gautier III (8), Ronald L. Gilliland (9)

TL;DR
Kepler-10b is the first rocky planet discovered by NASA's Kepler Mission, confirmed through transit and Doppler measurements, with detailed stellar and planetary characterization indicating a dense, rocky composition.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of Kepler-10b, the first confirmed rocky exoplanet found by Kepler, using combined photometric and spectroscopic data.
Findings
Kepler-10b is the smallest transiting exoplanet discovered to date.
The planet has a mass of approximately 4.56 Earth masses.
Kepler-10 is an old, Sun-like star with well-constrained properties.
Abstract
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…
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