Kepler Observations of Very Low-Mass Stars
E. L. Mart\'in, J. Cabrera, E. Martioli, E. Solano, R. Tata

TL;DR
This study uses Kepler data and optical spectra to identify very low-mass stars, assess their potential for hosting detectable small planets, and analyze their magnetic activity and rotation, providing insights into planet detection around these stars.
Contribution
It presents a detailed analysis of very low-mass stars with Kepler data, including spectral classification, transit detection limits, and activity characterization, highlighting the potential for detecting small planets around such stars.
Findings
Detection of planets 1-5 Earth radii within habitable zones.
Identification of a candidate Moon-sized transit signal likely caused by background binary.
Correlation between magnetic activity and transit detectability around low-mass stars.
Abstract
Observations of very low-mass stars with Kepler represent an excellent opportunity to search for planetary transits and to characterize optical photometric variability at the cool end of the stellar mass distribution. In this paper, we present low-resolution red optical spectra that allow us to identify 18 very low-mass stars that have Kepler light curves available in the public archive. Spectral types of these targets are found to lie in the range dM4.5--dM8.5, implying spectrophotometric distances from 17 pc to 80 pc. Limits to the presence of transiting planets are placed from modelling of the Kepler light curves. We find that the size of the planets detectable by Kepler around these small stars typically lie in the range 1 to 5 Earth radii within the habitable regions (P10 days). We identify one candidate transit with a period of 1.26 days that resembles the signal produced by…
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