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KOI-116.01 , the SIMBAD biblio (49 results) | C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.24CEST08:16:13 |
Bibcode/DOI | Score |
in Title|Abstract| Keywords |
in a table | in teXt, Caption, ... | Nb occurence | Nb objects in ref |
Citations (from ADS) |
Title | First 3 Authors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2012Natur.486..375B | 15 | D | 1 | 378 | 520 | An abundance of small exoplanets around stars with a wide range of metallicities. | BUCHHAVE L.A., LATHAM D.W., JOHANSEN A., et al. | ||
2012ApJ...756..185F | 15 | D | 1 | 1856 | 44 | Transit timing observations from Kepler. V. Transit timing variation candidates in the first sixteen months from polynomial models. | FORD E.B., RAGOZZINE D., ROWE J.F., et al. | ||
2011PASP..123..412W | 15 | D | 1 | 2897 | 398 | The Exoplanet Orbit Database. | WRIGHT J.T., KAKHOURI O., MARCY G.W., et al. | ||
2013ApJS..204...24B | 16 | D | 1 | 3274 | 922 | Planetary candidates observed by Kepler. III. Analysis of the first 16 months of data. | BATALHA N.M., ROWE J.F., BRYSON S.T., et al. | ||
2013ApJ...775...53H | 17 | D | 1 | 93 | 195 | Testing in situ assembly with the Kepler planet candidate sample. | HANSEN B.M.S. and MURRAY N. | ||
2014ApJS..210...19B | 16 | D | 1 | 5860 | 211 | Planetary candidates observed by Kepler IV: planet sample from Q1-Q8 (22 months). | BURKE C.J., BRYSON S.T., MULLALLY F., et al. | ||
2014ApJS..210...20M | 214 | D | X C | 5 | 94 | 394 | Masses, radii, and orbits of small Kepler planets: the transition from gaseous to rocky planets. | MARCY G.W., ISAACSON H., HOWARD A.W., et al. | |
2014ApJ...783L...6W | 97 | D | C | 2 | 66 | 499 | The mass-radius relation for 65 exoplanets smaller than 4 earth radii. | WEISS L.M. and MARCY G.W. | |
2014ApJ...783....4W | 16 | D | 1 | 487 | 103 | Influence of stellar multiplicity on planet formation. I. Evidence of suppressed planet formation due to stellar companions within 20 AU and validation of four planets from the Kepler multiple planet candidates. | WANG J., XIE J.-W., BARCLAY T., et al. | ||
2014ApJ...784...45R | 16 | D | 1 | 1691 | 388 | Validation of Kepler's multiple planet candidates. III. Light curve analysis and announcement of hundreds of new multi-planet systems. | ROWE J.F., BRYSON S.T., MARCY G.W., et al. | ||
2014ApJ...787..173H | 16 | D | 2 | 58 | 38 | Mass-radius relations and core-envelope decompositions of super-earths and sub-neptunes. | HOWE A.R., BURROWS A. and VERNE W. | ||
2014ApJ...790..146F | 16 | D | 1 | 918 | 579 | Architecture of Kepler's multi-transiting systems. II. New investigations with twice as many candidates. | FABRYCKY D.C., LISSAUER J.J., RAGOZZINE D., et al. | ||
2014ApJ...794..133S | 79 | X | 2 | 41 | 21 | Statistical eclipses of close-in Kepler sub-saturns. | SHEETS H.A. and DEMING D. | ||
2015ApJ...801...41R | 45 | X | 1 | 52 | 558 | Most 1.6 Earth-radius planets are not rocky. | ROGERS L.A. | ||
2015ApJS..217...16R | 16 | D | 1 | 8625 | 149 | Planetary candidates observed by Kepler. V. Planet sample from Q1-Q12 (36 months). | ROWE J.F., COUGHLIN J.L., ANTOCI V., et al. | ||
2015ApJ...806..183W | 16 | D | 1 | 223 | 146 | How rocky are they? the composition distribution of Kepler's Sub-Neptune planet candidates within 0.15 AU. | WOLFGANG A. and LOPEZ E. | ||
2015ApJ...809....8B | 16 | D | 1 | 112329 | 282 | Terrestrial planet occurrence rates for the Kepler GK dwarf sample. | BURKE C.J., CHRISTIANSEN J.L., MULLALLY F., et al. | ||
2016ApJ...820...39J | 17 | D | 1 | 107 | 126 | Secure mass measurements from transit timing: 10 Kepler exoplanets between 3 and 8 M⊕ with diverse densities and incident fluxes. | JONTOF-HUTTER D., FORD E.B., ROWE J.F., et al. | ||
2016ApJ...825...19W | 18 | D | 1 | 99 | 221 | Probabilistic mass-radius relationship for sub-Neptune-sized planets. | WOLFGANG A., ROGERS L.A. and FORD E.B. | ||
2016AJ....152...18B | 16 | D | 1 | 1167 | 34 | Robo-AO Kepler planetary candidate survey. II. Adaptive optics imaging of 969 Kepler exoplanet candidate host stars. | BARANEC C., ZIEGLER C., LAW N.M., et al. | ||
2016ApJ...827...78S | 41 | X | 1 | 49 | 94 | Eleven multiplanet systems from K2 campaigns 1 and 2 and the masses of two hot super-earths. | SINUKOFF E., HOWARD A.W., PETIGURA E.A., et al. | ||
2016AJ....152..158T | 16 | D | 1 | 4387 | 37 | Detection of potential transit signals in 17 quarters of Kepler data: results of the final Kepler mission transiting planet search (DR25). | TWICKEN J.D., JENKINS J.M., SEADER S.E., et al. | ||
2016AJ....152..181H | 16 | D | 1 | 9279 | 22 | SETI observations of exoplanets with the Allen Telescope Array. | HARP G.R., RICHARDS J., TARTER J.C., et al. | ||
2017ApJ...834...17C | 17 | D | 1 | 290 | 454 | Probabilistic forecasting of the masses and radii of other worlds. | CHEN J. and KIPPING D. | ||
2017MNRAS.466.1868C | 16 | D | 1 | 176 | 21 | An overabundance of low-density Neptune-like planets. | CUBILLOS P., ERKAEV N.V., JUVAN I., et al. | ||
2017AJ....154....5H | 16 | D | 1 | 231 | 145 | Kepler planet masses and eccentricities from TTV analysis. | HADDEN S. and LITHWICK Y. | ||
2017AJ....154...66F | 57 | D | X | 2 | 90 | 6 | The densities of planets in multiple stellar systems. | FURLAN E. and HOWELL S.B. | |
2017AJ....154..108J | 16 | D | 1 | 3237 | 137 | The California-Kepler Survey. II. Precise physical properties of 2025 Kepler planets and their host stars. | JOHNSON J.A., PETIGURA E.A., FULTON B.J., et al. | ||
2017AJ....154..109F | 16 | D | 1 | 900 | 847 | The California-Kepler Survey. III. A gap in the radius distribution of small planets. | FULTON B.J., PETIGURA E.A., HOWARD A.W., et al. | ||
2018AJ....155...48W | 16 | D | 1 | 911 | 204 | The California-Kepler survey. V. Peas in a pod: planets in a Kepler multi-planet system are similar in size and regularly spaced. | WEISS L.M., MARCY G.W., PETIGURA E.A., et al. | ||
2018ApJ...853..163J | 19 | D | 1 | 57 | 202 | Compositional imprints in Density-Distance-Time: a rocky composition for close-in low-mass exoplanets from the location of the valley of evaporation. | JIN S. and MORDASINI C. | ||
2018AJ....155..173C | 82 | X | 2 | 62 | 17 | K2-231 b: a sub-Neptune exoplanet transiting a solar twin in Ruprecht 147. | CURTIS J.L., VANDERBURG A., TORRES G., et al. | ||
2018ApJ...866...99B | 16 | D | 1 | 7129 | 233 | Revised radii of Kepler stars and planet's using Gaia Data Release 2. | BERGER T.A., HUBER D., GAIDOS E., et al. | ||
2018AJ....156..254W | 16 | D | 2 | 1269 | 42 | The California-Kepler Survey. VI. Kepler multis and singles have similar planet and stellar properties indicating a common origin. | WEISS L.M., ISAACSON H.T., MARCY G.W., et al. | ||
2018AJ....156..264F | 16 | D | 1 | 1909 | 365 | The California-Kepler Survey. VII. Precise planet radii leveraging Gaia DR2 reveal the stellar mass dependence of the Planet radius gap. | FULTON B.J. and PETIGURA E.A. | ||
2019RAA....19...41G | 17 | D | 1 | 1982 | 17 | Transit timing variations and linear ephemerides of confirmed Kepler transiting exoplanets. | GAJDOS P., VANKO M. and PARIMUCHA S. | ||
2019ApJ...875...29M | 17 | D | 1 | 2918 | 72 | A spectroscopic analysis of the California-Kepler Survey sample. I. Stellar parameters, planetary radii, and a slope in the radius gap. | MARTINEZ C.F., CUNHA K., GHEZZI L., et al. | ||
2019AJ....157..171K | 17 | D | 1 | 4069 | 2 | Visual analysis and demographics of Kepler transit timing variations. | KANE M., RAGOZZINE D., FLOWERS X., et al. | ||
2019AJ....157..174O | 17 | D | 1 | 176 | 61 | Discovery of a third transiting planet in the Kepler-47 circumbinary system. | OROSZ J.A., WELSH W.F., HAGHIGHIPOUR N., et al. | ||
2019ApJ...880L...1A | 17 | D | 1 | 146 | ~ | A gap in the mass distribution for warm Neptune and terrestrial planets. | ARMSTRONG D.J., MERU F., BAYLISS D., et al. | ||
2020AJ....159...41T | 17 | D | 1 | 564 | ~ | Estimating planetary mass with deep learning. | TASKER E.J., LANEUVILLE M. and GUTTENBERG N. | ||
2020MNRAS.491.5287O | 17 | D | 3 | 127 | 43 | Testing exoplanet evaporation with multitransiting systems. | OWEN J.E. and CAMPOS ESTRADA B. | ||
2020A&A...634A..43O | 43 | X | 1 | 141 | 104 | Revisited mass-radius relations for exoplanets below 120 M⊕. | OTEGI J.F., BOUCHY F. and HELLED R. | ||
2020AJ....159..239G | 17 | D | 1 | 1408 | ~ | Updated parameters and a new transmission spectrum of HD 97658b. | GUO X., CROSSFIELD I.J.M., DRAGOMIR D., et al. | ||
2020AJ....160..108B | 17 | D | 1 | 6855 | 109 | The Gaia-Kepler stellar properties catalog. II. Planet radius demographics as a function of stellar mass and age. | BERGER T.A., HUBER D., GAIDOS E., et al. | ||
2021ApJ...921...24S | 17 | D | 1 | 328 | 1 | The occurrence-weighted median planets discovered by transit surveys orbiting solar-type stars and their implications for planet formation and evolution. | SCHLAUFMAN K.C. and HALPERN N.D. | ||
2022ApJ...924....9H | 45 | X | 1 | 17 | 10 | Sculpting the sub-Saturn occurrence rate via atmospheric mass loss. | HALLATT T. and LEE E.J. | ||
2022RAA....22g2003J | 90 | F | 1 | 114 | 7 | CHES: A Space-borne Astrometric Mission for the Detection of Habitable Planets of the Nearby Solar-type Stars. | JI J.-H., LI H.-T., ZHANG J.-B., et al. | ||
2024ApJS..270....8W | 20 | D | 1 | 246 | ~ | The Kepler Giant Planet Search. I. A Decade of Kepler Planet-host Radial Velocities from W. M. Keck Observatory. | WEISS L.M., ISAACSON H., HOWARD A.W., et al. |