Not So Fast Kepler-1513: A Perturbing Planetary Interloper in the Exomoon Corridor
Daniel A. Yahalomi, David Kipping, David Nesvorn\'y, Paul A. Dalba,, Paul Benni, Ceiligh Cacho-Negrete, Karen Collins, Joel T. Earwicker, John, Arban Lewis, Kim K. McLeod, Richard P. Schwarz, Gavin Wang

TL;DR
This study reveals that observed TTVs in Kepler-1513 b are caused by a non-transiting planet, not a moon, highlighting the importance of extended observation baselines in exomoon detection.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that long-period non-transiting planets can mimic exomoon signals in TTV data, challenging previous interpretations based solely on short-term observations.
Findings
Kepler-1513 b's TTVs are caused by a non-transiting Saturn-mass planet.
Extended observations uncovered a long-period TTV component.
Short-term TTVs can be misleading without sufficient baseline.
Abstract
Transit Timing Variations (TTVs) can be induced by a range of physical phenomena, including planet-planet interactions, planet-moon interactions, and stellar activity. Recent work has shown that roughly half of moons would induce fast TTVs with a short period in the range of two-to-four orbits of its host planet around the star. An investigation of the Kepler TTV data in this period range identified one primary target of interest, Kepler-1513 b. Kepler-1513 b is a planet orbiting a late G-type dwarf at AU. Using Kepler photometry, this initial analysis showed that Kepler-1513 b's TTVs were consistent with a moon. Here, we report photometric observations of two additional transits nearly a decade after the last Kepler transit using both ground-based observations and space-based photometry with TESS. These new transit observations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy
