Characterizing the Cool KOIs III. KOI-961: A Small Star with Large Proper Motion and Three Small Planets
Philip S. Muirhead, John Asher Johnson, Kevin Apps, Joshua A. Carter,, Timothy D. Morton, Daniel C. Fabrycky, J. Sebastian Pineda, Michael Bottom,, Barbara Rojas-Ayala, Everett Schlawin, Katherine Hamren, Kevin R. Covey,, Justin R. Crepp, Keivan G. Stassun, Joshua Pepper

TL;DR
This paper characterizes the star KOI 961 and its three small exoplanets, confirming their planetary nature and providing detailed measurements of their properties, which are among the smallest exoplanets known to date.
Contribution
The study provides a detailed characterization of KOI 961 and its planets, including revised transit parameters and validation of their planetary status, highlighting some of the smallest exoplanets detected.
Findings
KOI 961 is similar to Barnard's Star in properties.
All three planets have radii less than 1 Earth radius.
The planets are validated with less than 1% false-positive probability.
Abstract
We present the characterization of the star KOI 961, an M dwarf with transit signals indicative of three short-period exoplanets, originally discovered by the Kepler Mission. We proceed by comparing KOI 961 to Barnard's Star, a nearby, well-characterized mid-M dwarf. By comparing colors, optical and near-infrared spectra, we find remarkable agreement between the two, implying similar effective temperatures and metallicities. Both are metal-poor compared to the Solar neighborhood, have low projected rotational velocity, high absolute radial velocity, large proper motion and no quiescent H-alpha emission--all of which is consistent with being old M dwarfs. We combine empirical measurements of Barnard's Star and expectations from evolutionary isochrones to estimate KOI 961's mass (0.13 +/- 0.05 Msun), radius (0.17 +/- 0.04 Rsun) and luminosity (2.40 x 10^(-3.0 +/- 0.3) Lsun). We calculate…
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