Kepler-62f: Kepler's First Small Planet in the Habitable Zone, but Is It Real?
William Borucki, Susan E. Thompson, Eric Agol, Christina, Hedges

TL;DR
This paper re-evaluates Kepler-62f, a small exoplanet in the habitable zone initially classified as a false positive, providing evidence that it is indeed a true planet through comprehensive data analysis.
Contribution
The study conducts detailed analysis and updates to confirm Kepler-62f as a genuine planet, correcting previous misclassification in exoplanet catalogs.
Findings
Kepler-62f is confirmed as a true planet.
Updated stellar and planet properties based on GAIA data.
Kepler-62f is a potentially rocky planet in the habitable zone.
Abstract
Kepler-62f is the first exoplanet small enough to plausibly have a rocky composition orbiting within the habitable zone (HZ) discovered by the Kepler Mission. The planet is 1.4 times the size of the Earth and has an orbital period of 267 days. At the time of its discovery, it had the longest period of any small planet in the habitable zone of a multi-planet system. Because of its long period, only four transits were observed during Kepler's interval of observations. It was initially missed by the Kepler pipeline, but the first three transits were identified by an independent search by Eric Agol, and it was identified as a planet candidate in subsequent Kepler catalogs. However in the latest catalog of exoplanets (Thompson et al., 2018), it is labeled as a false positive. Recent exoplanet catalogues have evolved from subjective classification to automatic classifications of planet…
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