Planet Hunters. VIII. Characterization of 41 Long-Period Exoplanet Candidates from Kepler Archival Data
Ji Wang, Debra A. Fischer, Thomas Barclay, Alyssa Picard, Bo Ma,, Brendan P. Bowler, Joseph R. Schmitt, Tabetha S. Boyajian, Kian J. Jek,, Daryll LaCourse, Christoph Baranec, Reed Riddle, Nicholas M. Law, Chris, Lintott, Kevin Schawinski, Dean Joseph Simister, Boscher Gregoire

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and validation of 7 long-period exoplanets from Kepler data, characterizing their host stars and assessing false positive rates, with many showing transit timing variations indicating additional system components.
Contribution
It presents the identification, validation, and characterization of 41 long-period exoplanet candidates, including 7 validated planets, using archival Kepler data and follow-up observations, expanding knowledge of distant planetary systems.
Findings
Validated 7 long-period exoplanets with high confidence.
Most candidates orbit at 1-3 AU, similar to Earth's distance from the Sun.
Transit timing variations suggest additional planets or companions.
Abstract
The census of exoplanets is incomplete for orbital distances larger than 1 AU. Here, we present 41 long-period planet candidates in 38 systems identified by Planet Hunters based on Kepler archival data (Q0-Q17). Among them, 17 exhibit only one transit, 14 have two visible transits and 10 have more than three visible transits. For planet candidates with only one visible transit, we estimate their orbital periods based on transit duration and host star properties. The majority of the planet candidates in this work (75%) have orbital periods that correspond to distances of 1-3 AU from their host stars. We conduct follow-up imaging and spectroscopic observations to validate and characterize planet host stars. In total, we obtain adaptive optics images for 33 stars to search for possible blending sources. Six stars have stellar companions within 4". We obtain high-resolution spectra for 6…
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