Revision of Earth-sized Kepler Planet Candidate Properties with High Resolution Imaging by Hubble Space Telescope
Kimberly M. S. Cartier, Ronald L. Gilliland, Jason T. Wright, and, David R. Ciardi

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution Hubble imaging to reassess the properties and habitability potential of Kepler planet candidates, revealing stellar multiplicity and refining planetary parameters.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution imaging data and analysis methods to accurately determine stellar multiplicity and planetary properties of Kepler candidates.
Findings
Resolved stellar multiplicity in key Kepler systems.
Refined planetary sizes and habitability assessments.
Identified some planets as non-habitable due to stellar companions.
Abstract
We present the results of our Hubble Space Telescope program and describe how our analysis methods were used to re-evaluate the habitability of some of the most interesting Kepler planet candidates. Our program observed 22 Kepler Object of Interest (KOI) host stars, several of which were found to be multiple star systems unresolved by Kepler. We use our high-resolution imaging to spatially resolve the stellar multiplicity of Kepler-296, KOI-2626, and KOI-3049, and develop a conversion to the Kepler photometry (Kp) from the F555W and F775W filters on WFC3/UVIS. The binary system Kepler-296 (5 planets) has a projected separation of 0.217" (80AU); KOI-2626 (1 planet candidate) is a triple star system with a projected separation of 0.201" (70AU) between the primary and secondary components and 0.161" (55AU) between the primary and tertiary; and the binary system KOI-3049 (1 planet…
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