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A 16 Hour Transit of Kepler-167 e Observed by the Ground-based Unistellar Telescope Network

Authors :
Perrocheau, Amaury
Esposito, Thomas M.
Dalba, Paul A.
Marchis, Franck
Avsar, Arin M.
Carrera, Ero
Douezy, Michel
Fukui, Keiichi
Gamurot, Ryan
Goto, Tateki
Guillet, Bruno
Kuossari, Petri
Laugier, Jean-Marie
Lewin, Pablo
Loose, Margaret A.
Manganese, Laurent
Mirwald, Benjamin
Mountz, Hubert
Mountz, Marti
Ostrem, Cory
Parker, Bruce
Picard, Patrick
Primm, Michael
Randolph, Justus
Runge, Jay
Savonnet, Robert
Sharon, Chelsea E.
Shih, Jenny
Shimizu, Masao
Silvis, George
Simard, Georges
Simpson, Alan
Sivayogan, Thusheeta
Stein, Meyer
Trudel, Denis
Tsuchiyama, Hiroaki
Wagner, Kevin
Will, Stefan
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

More than 5,000 exoplanets have been confirmed and among them almost 4,000 were discovered by the transit method. However, few transiting exoplanets have an orbital period greater than 100 days. Here we report a transit detection of Kepler-167 e, a "Jupiter analog" exoplanet orbiting a K4 star with a period of 1,071 days, using the Unistellar ground-based telescope network. From 2021 November 18 to 20, citizen astronomers located in nine different countries gathered 43 observations, covering the 16 hour long transit. Using a nested sampling approach to combine and fit the observations, we detected the mid-transit time to be UTC 2021 November 19 17:20:51 with a 1$\sigma$ uncertainty of 9.8 minutes, making it the longest-period planet to ever have its transit detected from the ground. This is the fourth transit detection of Kepler-167 e, but the first made from the ground. This timing measurement refines the orbit and keeps the ephemeris up to date without requiring space telescopes. Observations like this demonstrate the capabilities of coordinated networks of small telescopes to identify and characterize planets with long orbital periods.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted in ApJL

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2211.01532
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/aca073