The Discovery of the Long-Period, Eccentric Planet Kepler-88 d and System Characterization with Radial Velocities and Photodynamical Analysis
Lauren M. Weiss, Daniel C. Fabrycky, Eric Agol, Sean M. Mills, Andrew, W. Howard, Howard Isaacson, Erik A. Petigura, Benjamin J. Fulton, Lea Hirsch,, Evan Sinukoff

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of a long-period, eccentric giant planet Kepler-88 d in a multi-planet system using six years of radial velocity data combined with photodynamical modeling, revealing precise orbital and mass parameters.
Contribution
It presents the first detection and comprehensive analysis of Kepler-88 d, integrating RV and photometric data to refine the system's architecture and planetary properties.
Findings
Kepler-88 d has a 1403-day period and eccentricity of 0.41.
Photodynamical modeling yields precise masses and orbits for planets b and c.
Planets b and c are low-eccentricity, low-inclination, and apsidally anti-aligned.
Abstract
We present the discovery of Kepler-88 d ( days, , ) based on six years of radial velocity (RV) follow-up from the W. M. Keck Observatory HIRES spectrograph. Kepler-88 has two previously identified planets. Kepler-88 b (KOI-142.01) transits in the NASA \Kepler\ photometry and has very large transit timing variations. \citet{Nesvorny2013} perfomed a dynamical analysis of the TTVs to uniquely identify the orbital period and mass of the perturbing planet (Kepler-88 c), which was later was confirmed with RVs from the Observatoire de Haute-Provence (OHP, Barros et al. 2014). To fully explore the architecture of this system, we performed photodynamical modeling on the \Kepler\ photometry combined with the RVs from Keck and OHP and stellar parameters from spectroscopy and Gaia. Planet d is not…
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