A search for transit timing variations within the exomoon corridor using Kepler data
David Kipping, Daniel A. Yahalomi

TL;DR
This study searches Kepler data for transit timing variations indicative of exomoons, identifying one promising candidate, Kepler-1513b, with a potential exomoon, and emphasizes the importance of independent validation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a robust methodology for detecting exomoons via TTVs and reports the first candidate passing all validation tests using Kepler data.
Findings
Identified 11 significant TTV signals in Kepler data.
Only one candidate, Kepler-1513b, passes all validation criteria.
Estimated potential exomoon mass as low as 0.75 Lunar masses.
Abstract
An exomoon will produce transit timing variations (TTVs) upon the parent planet and their undersampled nature causes half of such TTVs to manifest within a frequency range of 2 to 4 cycles, irrespective of exomoon demographics. Here, we search through published Kepler TTV data for such signals, applying a battery of significance and robustness checks, plus independent light curve analyses for candidate signals. Using the original transit times, we identify 11 (ostensibly) single-planets with a robust, significant and fast ( cycles) TTV signal. However, of these, only 5 are recovered in an independent analysis of the original photometry, underscoring the importance of such checks. The surviving signals are subjected to an additional trifecta of statistical tests to ensure signal significance, predictive capability and consistency with an exomoon. KOI-3678.01, previously…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
