The Neptune-Sized Circumbinary Planet Kepler-38b
Jerome A. Orosz, William F. Welsh, Joshua A. Carter, Erik Brugamyer,, Lars A. Buchhave, William D. Cochran, Michael Endl, Eric B. Ford, Phillip, MacQueen, Donald R. Short, Guillermo Torres, Gur Windmiller, Eric Agol,, Thomas Barclay, Douglas A. Caldwell, Bruce D. Clarke

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of Kepler-38b, a Neptune-sized circumbinary planet orbiting a binary star system, using Kepler data and dynamical modeling.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of a Neptune-sized circumbinary planet with precise measurements of its size and orbital parameters.
Findings
Planet radius is 4.35 Earth radii.
Orbital period is approximately 105.6 days.
Upper mass limit is 122 Earth masses.
Abstract
We discuss the discovery and characterization of the circumbinary planet Kepler-38b. The stellar binary is single-lined, with a period of 18.8 days, and consists of a moderately evolved main-sequence star (M_A = 0.949 +/- 0.059 solar masses and R_A = 1.757 +/- 0.034 solar radii) paired with a low-mass star (M_B = 0.249 +/- 0.010 solar masses and R_B = 0.2724 +/- 0.0053 solar radii) in a mildly eccentric (e=0.103) orbit. A total of eight transits due to a circumbinary planet crossing the primary star were identified in the Kepler light curve (using Kepler Quarters 1 through 11), from which a planetary period of 105.595 +/- 0.053 days can be established. A photometric dynamical model fit to the radial velocity curve and Kepler light curve yields a planetary radius of 4.35 +/- 0.11 Earth radii, or 1.12 +/- 0.03 Neptune radii. Since the planet is not sufficiently massive to observably alter…
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