Kepler-10c, a 2.2-Earth radius transiting planet in a multiple system
Francois Fressin, Guillermo Torres, Jean-Michel Desert, David, Charbonneau, Natalie M. Batalha, Jonathan J. Fortney, Jason F. Rowe,, Christopher Allen, William J. Borucki, Timothy M. Brown, Stephen T. Bryson,, David R. Ciardi, William D. Cochran, Drake Deming, Edward W. Dunham

TL;DR
This paper validates Kepler-10 c as a small, rocky exoplanet using light-curve modeling, Spitzer observations, and statistical analysis, demonstrating a method for confirming planets without Doppler measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a statistical validation approach for small transiting exoplanets, combining multi-wavelength observations and false positive analysis, applicable when dynamical confirmation is challenging.
Findings
Kepler-10 c has a radius of approximately 2.2 Earth radii.
The false alarm rate for Kepler-10 c is estimated at 1.6 x 10^-5.
The validation method can be applied to other small Kepler candidates.
Abstract
The Kepler Mission has recently announced the discovery of Kepler-10 b, the smallest exoplanet discovered to date and the first rocky planet found by the spacecraft. A second, 45-day period transit-like signal present in the photometry from the first eight months of data could not be confirmed as being caused by a planet at the time of that announcement. Here we apply the light-curve modeling technique known as BLENDER to explore the possibility that the signal might be due to an astrophysical false positive (blend). To aid in this analysis we report the observation of two transits with the Spitzer Space Telescope at 4.5 {\mu}m. When combined they yield a transit depth of 344 \pm 85 ppm that is consistent with the depth in the Kepler passband (376 \pm 9 ppm, ignoring limb darkening), which rules out blends with an eclipsing binary of a significantly different color than the target.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
