Giant Outer Transiting Exoplanet Mass (GOT 'EM) Survey. I. Confirmation of an Eccentric, Cool Jupiter With an Interior Earth-sized Planet Orbiting Kepler-1514
Paul A. Dalba, Stephen R. Kane, Howard Isaacson, Steven Giacalone,, Andrew W. Howard, Joseph E. Rodriguez, Andrew Vanderburg, Jason D. Eastman,, Adam L. Kraus, Trent J. Dupuy, Lauren M. Weiss, Edward W. Schwieterman

TL;DR
This study confirms a massive, eccentric, cool Jupiter exoplanet orbiting Kepler-1514 and identifies an Earth-sized planet in the same system, providing valuable data on long-period exoplanets and their compositions.
Contribution
First long-term RV confirmation of a long-period giant exoplanet with detailed mass, density, and eccentricity measurements, and validation of an additional Earth-sized planet in the system.
Findings
Kepler-1514 b is a 5.28 M_J, 218-day orbit giant with high density.
The giant planet has an eccentricity of ~0.4, supporting certain formation models.
An Earth-sized planet on a 10.5-day orbit is statistically validated.
Abstract
Despite the severe bias of the transit method of exoplanet discovery toward short orbital periods, a modest sample of transiting exoplanets with orbital periods greater than 100 days is known. Long-term radial velocity (RV) surveys are pivotal to confirming these signals and generating a set of planetary masses and densities for planets receiving moderate to low irradiation from their host stars. Here, we conduct RV observations of Kepler-1514 from the Keck I telescope using the High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer. From these data, we measure the mass of the statistically validated giant ( ) exoplanet Kepler-1514 b with a 218 day orbital period as . The bulk density of this cool (390 K) giant planet is g cm, consistent with a core supported by electron degeneracy pressure. We also infer an orbital…
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