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Kepler-21b: A rocky planet around a V = 8.25 magnitude star

Authors :
Lopez-Morales, Mercedes
Haywood, Raphaelle D.
Coughlin, Jeffrey L.
Zeng, Li
Buchhave, Lars A.
Giles, Helen A. C.
Affer, Laura
Bonomo, Aldo S.
Charbonneau, David
Cameron, Andrew Collier
Cosentino, Rosario
Dressing, Courtney D.
Dumusque, Xavier
Figueira, Pedro
Fiorenzano, Aldo F. M.
Harutyunyan, Avet
Johnson, John Asher
Latham, David W.
Lopez, Eric D.
Lovis, Christophe
Malavolta, Luca
Mayor, Michel
Micela, Giusi
Molinari, Emilio
Mortier, Annelies
Motalebi, Fatemeh
Nascimbeni, Valerio
Pepe, Francesco
Phillips, David F.
Piotto, Giampaolo
Pollacco, Don
Queloz, Didier
Rice, Ken
Sasselov, Dimitar
Segransan, Damien
Sozzetti, Alessandro
Udry, Stephane
Vanderburg, Andrew
Watson, Chris
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

HD 179070, aka Kepler-21, is a V = 8.25 F6IV star and the brightest exoplanet host discovered by Kepler. An early detailed analysis by Howell et al. (2012) of the first thirteen months (Q0 - Q5) of Kepler light curves revealed transits of a planetary companion, Kepler-21b, with a radius of about 1.60 +/- 0.04 R_earth and an orbital period of about 2.7857 days. However, they could not determine the mass of the planet from the initial radial velocity observations with Keck-HIRES, and were only able to impose a 2-sigma upper limit of 10 M_earth. Here we present results from the analysis of 82 new radial velocity observations of this system obtained with HARPS-N, together with the existing 14 HIRES data points. We detect the Doppler signal of Kepler-21b with a radial velocity semi-amplitude K = 2.00 +/- 0.65 m/s, which corresponds to a planetary mass of 5.1 +/- 1.7 M_earth. We also measure an improved radius for the planet of 1.639 (+0.019, -0.015) R_earth, in agreement with the radius reported by Howell et al. (2012). We conclude that Kepler-21b, with a density of 6.4 +/- 2.1 g/cm^3, belongs to the population of terrestrial planets with iron, magnesium silicate interiors, which have lost the majority of their envelope volatiles via stellar winds or gravitational escape. The radial velocity analysis presented in this paper serves as example of the type of analysis that will be necessary to confirm the masses of TESS small planet candidates.<br />Comment: 52 pages, 13 figures, 1 long table. Accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1609.07617
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-6256/152/6/204