Planet Hunters VII. Discovery of a New Low-Mass, Low-Density Planet (PH3 c) Orbiting Kepler-289 with Mass Measurements of Two Additional Planets (PH3 b and d)
Joseph R. Schmitt, Eric Agol, Katherine M. Deck, Leslie A. Rogers, J., Zachary Gazak, Debra A. Fischer, Ji Wang, Matthew J. Holman, Kian J. Jek,, Charles Margossian, Mark R. Omohundro, Troy Winarski, John M. Brewer, Matthew, J. Giguere, Chris Lintott, Stuart Lynn

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and mass measurements of a new low-mass, low-density planet orbiting Kepler-289, using transit timing variations, and provides detailed characterization of the planetary system and host star.
Contribution
It presents the first mass determination of a low-density, low-mass planet via TTVs and characterizes the planetary system around a young Sun-like star.
Findings
Discovery of a new low-mass, low-density planet (PH3 c)
Mass measurements of three planets in the Kepler-289 system
PH3 c has a substantial H/He atmosphere and joins the population of similar planets
Abstract
We report the discovery of one newly confirmed planet ( days, ) and mass determinations of two previously validated Kepler planets, Kepler-289 b ( days, ) and Kepler-289-c ( days, ), through their transit timing variations (TTVs). We also exclude the possibility that these three planets reside in a Laplace resonance. The outer planet has very deep (), high signal-to-noise transits, which puts extremely tight constraints on its host star's stellar properties via Kepler's Third Law. The star PH3 is a young ( Gyr as determined by isochrones and gyrochronology), Sun-like star with , , and K. The middle planet's large TTV amplitude ( hours) resulted either in…
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