4.7 Article

37 new validated planets in overlapping K2 campaigns

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 508, Issue 1, Pages 195-218

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab2305

Keywords

exoplanets; stars: fundamental parameters; planets and satellites: detection; techniques: photometric; methods: data analysis

Funding

  1. NOAO observing program [2017A-0377]
  2. NASA Exoplanet Exploration Program
  3. NASA Ames Research Center
  4. JSPS KAKENHI [18H05442, 15H02063, 17H04574, 18H01265, 18H05439, 20K14518, 17F17764, 17H06360]
  5. JST PRESTO [JPMJPR1775]
  6. NASA WIYN PI Data Award
  7. Swedish National Space Agency [DNR 65/19, 174/18]
  8. Spanish Ministry
  9. Ramon y Cajal fellowship [RYC-2015-17697]
  10. CNES PLATO grant
  11. Swedish National Space Agency (SNSA) [DNR 2020-00104]
  12. National Aeronautics and Space Administration under the Exoplanet Exploration Program
  13. Space Telescope Science Institute under U.S. Government [NAG W-2166]
  14. DFG [RA714/14-1]
  15. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H04574, 18H01265, 20K14518] Funding Source: KAKEN

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By analyzing and validating 68 candidate planetary systems identified during Campaigns 5 and 6 of the NASA K2 mission, we found that most of these systems can be statistically validated as planets, including some systems with interesting features such as the longest period sub-Neptune and sub-Saturns around F stars.
We analysed 68 candidate planetary systems first identified during Campaigns 5 and 6 (C5 and C6) of the NASA K2 mission. We set out to validate these systems by using a suite of follow-up observations, including adaptive optics, speckle imaging, and reconnaissance spectroscopy. The overlap between C5 with C16 and C18, and C6 with C17, yields light curves with long baselines that allow us to measure the transit ephemeris very precisely, revisit single transit candidates identified in earlier campaigns, and search for additional transiting planets with longer periods not detectable in previous works. Using vespa, we compute false positive probabilities of less than 1 percent for 37 candidates orbiting 29 unique host stars and hence statistically validate them as planets. These planets have a typical size of 2.2 R-circle plus and orbital periods between 1.99 and 52.71 d. We highlight interesting systems including a sub-Neptune with the longest period detected by K2, sub-Saturns around F stars, several multiplanetary systems in a variety of architectures. These results show that a wealth of planetary systems still remains in the K2 data, some of which can be validated using minimal follow-up observations and taking advantage of analyses presented in previous catalogues.

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