Transit least-squares survey -- III. A $1.9\,R_\oplus$ transit candidate in the habitable zone of Kepler-160 and a nontransiting planet characterized by transit-timing variations
Ren\'e Heller (1), Michael Hippke (2,3), Jantje Freudenthal (4), Kai, Rodenbeck (4), Natalie M. Batalha (5), Steve Bryson (6) ((1) Max Planck, Institute for Solar System Research, G\"ottingen (GER), (2) Sonneberg, Observatory (GER), (3) Visiting Scholar

TL;DR
This study used advanced detection algorithms on Kepler data to identify a new Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone of Kepler-160 and characterized a nontransiting planet through transit-timing variations.
Contribution
It reports the discovery of a new transiting planet candidate and a nontransiting planet in the Kepler-160 system, enhancing understanding of its planetary architecture.
Findings
Discovered a 1.9 R_⊕ planet candidate in the habitable zone.
Identified a nontransiting planet explaining TTVs with 1-100 Earth masses.
Confirmed at least three planets in the Kepler-160 system.
Abstract
The Sun-like star Kepler-160 (KOI-456) has been known to host two transiting planets, Kepler-160 b and c, of which planet c shows substantial transit-timing variations (TTVs). We used the archival Kepler photometry of Kepler-160 to search for additional transiting planets using a combination of our Wotan detrending algorithm and our transit least-squares (TLS) detection algorithm. We also used the Mercury N-body gravity code to study the orbital dynamics of the system. First, we recovered the known transit series of planets Kepler-160 b and c. Then we found a new transiting candidate with a radius of 1.91 (+0.17, -0.14) Earth radii (R_ear), an orbital period of 378.417 (+0.028, -0.025) d, and Earth-like insolation. The vespa software predicts that this signal has an astrophysical false-positive probability of FPP_3 = 1.8e-3 when the multiplicity of the system is taken into account.…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
