Kepler423b: a half-Jupiter mass planet transiting a very old solar-like star
D. Gandolfi, H. Parviainen, H. J. Deeg, A. F. Lanza, M. Fridlund, P., G. Prada Moroni, R. Alonso, T. Augusteijn, J. Cabrera, T. Evans, S. Geier, A., P. Hatzes, T. Holczer, S. Hoyer, T. Kangas, T. Mazeh, I. Pagano, L. Tal-Or,, B. Tingley

TL;DR
This paper confirms the existence of a half-Jupiter mass planet transiting an old solar-like star, combining Kepler photometry with radial velocity data, and provides detailed characterization of the planet and host star.
Contribution
First to combine full Kepler photometry with high-precision radial velocities for KOI-183.01, providing comprehensive system parameters and insights into its atmospheric properties.
Findings
Planet KOI-183b has a mass of 0.595 M_Jup and radius of 1.192 R_Jup.
The host star is an 11 Gyr old G4 dwarf with specific physical parameters.
KOI-183b has one of the lowest known Bond albedos among gas giants.
Abstract
We report the spectroscopic confirmation of the Kepler object of interest KOI-183.01 (Kepler-423b), a half-Jupiter mass planet transiting an old solar-like star every 2.7 days. Our analysis is the first to combine the full Kepler photometry (quarters 1-17) with high-precision radial velocity measurements taken with the FIES spectrograph at the Nordic Optical Telescope. We simultaneously modelled the photometric and spectroscopic data-sets using Bayesian approach coupled with Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling. We found that the Kepler pre-search data conditioned (PDC) light curve of KOI-183 exhibits quarter-to-quarter systematic variations of the transit depth, with a peak-to-peak amplitude of about 4.3 % and seasonal trends reoccurring every four quarters. We attributed these systematics to an incorrect assessment of the quarterly variation of the crowding metric. The host star KOI-183…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
