The Kepler-19 System: A Transiting 2.2 R_Earth Planet and a Second Planet Detected via Transit Timing Variations
Sarah Ballard, Daniel Fabrycky, Francois Fressin, David Charbonneau,, Jean-Michel Desert, Guillermo Torres, Geoffrey Marcy, Christopher J. Burke,, Howard Isaacson, Christopher Henze, Jason H. Steffen, David R. Ciardi, Steven, B. Howell, William D. Cochran, Michael Endl

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the Kepler-19 system, featuring a transiting 2.2 Earth-radius planet and a second planet inferred from transit timing variations, with detailed stellar characterization and validation against false positives.
Contribution
First detection of a transiting super-Earth and a second planet via transit timing variations in the Kepler-19 system, with comprehensive stellar and planetary characterization.
Findings
Kepler-19b has a radius of 2.209 Earth radii.
Transit timing variations indicate a second planet, Kepler-19c.
The second planet has a period less than 160 days and mass less than 6 Jupiter masses.
Abstract
We present the discovery of the Kepler-19 planetary system, which we first identified from a 9.3-day periodic transit signal in the Kepler photometry. From high-resolution spectroscopy of the star, we find a stellar effective temperature Teff=5541 \pm 60 K, a metallicity [Fe/H]=-0.13 \pm 0.06, and a surface gravity log(g)=4.59 \pm 0.10. We combine the estimate of Teff and [Fe/H] with an estimate of the stellar density derived from the photometric light curve to deduce a stellar mass of M_star = 0.936 \pm 0.040 M_Sun and a stellar radius of R_star = 0.850 \pm 0.018 R_Sun. We rule out the possibility that the transits result from an astrophysical false positive by first identifying the subset of stellar blends that reproduce the precise shape of the light curve. We conclude that the planetary scenario is more than three orders of magnitude more likely than a blend. The blend scenario is…
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