Eleven Multi-planet Systems from K2 Campaigns 1 & 2 and the Masses of Two Hot Super-Earths
Evan Sinukoff, Andrew W. Howard, Erik A. Petigura, Joshua E., Schlieder, Ian J. M. Crossfield, David R. Ciardi, Benjamin J. Fulton, Howard, Isaacson, Kimberly M. Aller, Christoph Baranec, Charles A. Beichman, Brad M., S. Hansen, Heather A. Knutson, Nicholas M. Law

TL;DR
This paper catalogs 11 multi-planet systems from K2 Campaigns 1 and 2, providing detailed characterization and mass measurements for two hot super-Earths, demonstrating K2's effectiveness in discovering systems around bright stars.
Contribution
It presents a systematic search and validation of 26 planets in 11 multi-planet systems from K2 data, including mass measurements for two hot super-Earths, expanding the known population of such systems.
Findings
26 planets in 11 systems characterized
Two planets confirmed by mass detection
Most planets are smaller than Neptune and have short periods
Abstract
We present a catalog of 11 multi-planet systems from Campaigns 1 and 2 of the K2 mission. We report the sizes and orbits of 26 planets split between seven 2-planet systems and four 3-planet systems. These planets stem from a systematic search of the K2 photometry for all dwarf stars observed by K2 in these fields. We precisely characterized the host stars with adaptive optics imaging and analysis of high-resolution optical spectra from Keck/HIRES and medium-resolution spectra from IRTF/SpeX. We confirm two planet candidates by mass detection and validate the remaining 24 candidates to confidence. Thirteen planets were previously validated or confirmed by other studies and 24 were previously identified as planet candidates. The planets are mostly smaller than Neptune (21/26 planets) as in the Kepler mission and all have short periods ( d) due to the duration of the K2…
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.
