They are Small Worlds After All: Revised Properties of Kepler M Dwarf Stars and their Planets
E. Gaidos, A. W. Mann, A. L. Kraus, and M. Ireland

TL;DR
This study characterizes M dwarf stars observed by Kepler, revises their planetary systems' properties, and finds that these stars host multiple small planets with coplanar orbits, many of which are in the habitable zone.
Contribution
It provides a revised catalog of M dwarf stellar and planetary properties and models the distribution and architecture of their planetary systems, highlighting coplanarity and habitability.
Findings
Average of 2.2 planets per M dwarf
Planet radii peak at ~1.2 Earth radii
Multiple planets are in the habitable zone
Abstract
We classified the reddest () stars observed by the NASA mission into main sequence dwarf or evolved giant stars and determined the properties of 4216 M dwarfs based on a comparison of available photometry with that of nearby calibrator stars, as well as available proper motions and spectra. We revised the properties of candidate transiting planets using the stellar parameters, high-resolution imaging to identify companion stars, and, in the case of binaries, fitting light curves to identify the likely planet host. In 49 of 54 systems we validated the primary as the host star. We inferred the intrinsic distribution of M dwarf planets using the method of iterative Monte Carlo simulation. We compared several models of planet orbital geometry and clustering and found that one where planets are exponentially distributed and almost precisely coplanar best describes the…
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