Determining the Mass of Kepler-78b With Nonparametric Gaussian Process Estimation
Samuel K. Grunblatt, Andrew W. Howard, Rapha\"elle D. Haywood

TL;DR
This study estimates the mass of Kepler-78b using nonparametric Gaussian process regression to model stellar activity, resulting in a robust mass measurement consistent with previous findings and suggesting an Earth-like composition.
Contribution
The paper introduces a nonparametric Gaussian process approach for modeling stellar activity in radial velocity data, improving mass estimation accuracy for Kepler-78b.
Findings
Mass of Kepler-78b is 1.87 (+0.27/-0.26) Earth masses.
Kepler-78b has a bulk density of approximately 6 g/cm³.
The planet's composition is consistent with an Earth-like, rock-iron mixture.
Abstract
Kepler-78b is a transiting planet that is 1.2 times the radius of Earth and orbits a young, active K dwarf every 8 hours. The mass of Kepler-78b has been independently reported by two teams based on radial velocity measurements using the HIRES and HARPS-N spectrographs. Due to the active nature of the host star, a stellar activity model is required to distinguish and isolate the planetary signal in radial velocity data. Whereas previous studies tested parametric stellar activity models, we modeled this system using nonparametric Gaussian process (GP) regression. We produced a GP regression of relevant Kepler photometry. We then use the posterior parameter distribution for our photometric fit as a prior for our simultaneous GP + Keplerian orbit models of the radial velocity datasets. We tested three simple kernel functions for our GP regressions. Based on a Bayesian likelihood analysis,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
