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275 Candidates and 149 Validated Planets Orbiting Bright Stars in K2 Campaigns 0-10

Authors :
Mayo, Andrew W.
Vanderburg, Andrew
Latham, David W.
Bieryla, Allyson
Morton, Timothy D.
Buchhave, Lars A.
Dressing, Courtney D.
Beichman, Charles
Berlind, Perry
Calkins, Michael L.
Ciardi, David R.
Crossfield, Ian J. M.
Esquerdo, Gilbert A.
Everett, Mark E.
Gonzales, Erica J.
Hirsch, Lea A.
Horch, Elliott P.
Howard, Andrew W.
Howell, Steve B.
Livingston, John
Patel, Rahul
Petigura, Erik A.
Schlieder, Joshua E.
Scott, Nicholas J.
Schumer, Clea F.
Sinukoff, Evan
Teske, Johanna
Winters, Jennifer G.
Source :
2018 AJ 155 3
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Since 2014, NASA's K2 mission has observed large portions of the ecliptic plane in search of transiting planets and has detected hundreds of planet candidates. With observations planned until at least early 2018, K2 will continue to identify more planet candidates. We present here 275 planet candidates observed during Campaigns 0-10 of the K2 mission that are orbiting stars brighter than 13 mag (in Kepler band) and for which we have obtained high-resolution spectra (R = 44,000). These candidates are analyzed using the VESPA package (Morton 2012, 2015b) in order to calculate their false-positive probabilities (FPP). We find that 149 candidates are validated with an FPP lower than 0.1%, 39 of which were previously only candidates and 56 of which were previously undetected. The processes of data reduction, candidate identification, and statistical validation are described, and the demographics of the candidates and newly validated planets are explored. We show tentative evidence of a gap in the planet radius distribution of our candidate sample. Comparing our sample to the Kepler candidate sample investigated by Fulton et al. (2017), we conclude that more planets are required to quantitatively confirm the gap with K2 candidates or validated planets. This work, in addition to increasing the population of validated K2 planets by nearly 50% and providing new targets for follow-up observations, will also serve as a framework for validating candidates from upcoming K2 campaigns and the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, expected to launch in 2018.<br />Comment: Published in AJ, 47 pages, 18 figures, 7 tables, associated supplementary dataset available at https://zenodo.org/record/1164791

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
2018 AJ 155 3
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1802.05277
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/aaadff