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KOI-206 , the SIMBAD biblio (45 results) | C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.19CEST07:07:11 |
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011ApJ...728..117B | 15 | D | 1 | 321 | 310 | Characteristics of Kepler planetary candidates based on the first data set. | BORUCKI W.J., KOCH D.G., BASRI G., et al. | ||
2011ApJ...736...19B | 15 | D | 1 | 1507 | 867 | Characteristics of planetary candidates observed by Kepler. II. Analysis of the first four months of data. | BORUCKI W.J., KOCH D.G., BASRI G., et al. | ||
2011ApJ...738..170M | 15 | D | 1 | 997 | 230 | On the low false positive probabilities of Kepler planet candidates. | MORTON T.D. and JOHNSON J.A. | ||
2011ApJS..197....1M | 17 | D | 1 | 16 | 89 | The distribution of transit durations for Kepler planet candidates and implications for their orbital eccentricities. | MOORHEAD A.V., FORD E.B., MOREHEAD R.C., et al. | ||
2011ApJS..197....2F | 15 | D | 1 | 980 | 66 | Transit timing observations from Kepler. I. Statistical analysis of the first four months. | FORD E.B., ROWE J.F., FABRYCKY D.C., et al. | ||
2011AJ....142..160S | 15 | D | 1 | 2325 | 365 | Kepler eclipsing binary stars. II. 2165 eclipsing binaries in the second data release. | SLAWSON R.W., PRSA A., WELSH W.F., et al. | ||
2012ApJS..199...24T | 15 | D | 1 | 5394 | 66 | Detection of potential transit signals in the first three quarters of Kepler mission data. | TENENBAUM P., CHRISTIANSEN J.L., JENKINS J.M., et al. | ||
2012ApJ...752...72D | 15 | D | 1 | 229 | 7 | A correlation between the eclipse depths of Kepler gas giant candidates and the metallicities of their parent stars. | DODSON-ROBINSON S.E. | ||
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. | ||
2012ApJ...756..186S | 15 | D | 1 | 811 | 35 | Transit timing observations from Kepler. VI. Potentially interesting candidate systems from fourier-based statistical tests. | STEFFEN J.H., FORD E.B., ROWE J.F., et al. | ||
2012A&A...545A..76S | 16 | D | 1 | 69 | 149 | SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates. VII. A false-positive rate of 35% for Kepler close-in giant candidates. | SANTERNE A., DIAZ R.F., MOUTOU C., et al. | ||
2012A&A...548A..44C | 39 | X | 1 | 137 | 22 | A study of the performance of the transit detection tool DST in space-based surveys. Application of the CoRoT pipeline to Kepler data. | CABRERA J., CSIZMADIA Sz., ERIKSON A., et al. | ||
2013A&A...552A.119S | 16 | D | 1 | 1487 | 118 | Magnetic energy fluxes in sub-Alfvenic planet star and moon planet interactions. | SAUR J., GRAMBUSCH T., DULING S., et al. | ||
2013ApJ...775L..11M | 16 | D | 1 | 2010 | 189 | Stellar rotation periods of the Kepler Objects of Interest: a dearth of close-in planets around fast rotators. | McQUILLAN A., MAZEH T. and AIGRAIN S. | ||
2013ApJS..208...16M | 16 | D | 1 | 1518 | 139 | Transit timing observations from Kepler. VIII. Catalog of transit timing measurements of the first twelve quarters. | MAZEH T., NACHMANI G., HOLCZER T., et al. | ||
2013A&A...556A.150S | 16 | D | 1 | 635 | 211 | SWEET-Cat: a catalogue of parameters for Stars With ExoplanETs. I. New atmospheric parameters and masses for 48 stars with planets. | SANTOS N.C., SOUSA S.G., MORTIER A., et al. | ||
2013A&A...557A.139S | 40 | X | 1 | 11 | 37 | The contribution of secondary eclipses as astrophysical false positives to exoplanet transit surveys. | SANTERNE A., FRESSIN F., DIAZ R.F., et al. | ||
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. | ||
2014MNRAS.437.3473A | 16 | D | 1 | 2614 | 45 | A catalogue of temperatures for Kepler eclipsing binary stars. | ARMSTRONG D.J., GOMEZ MAQUEO CHEW Y., FAEDI F., et al. | ||
2014AJ....147..119C | 16 | D | 2 | 8010 | 91 | Contamination in the Kepler field. Identification of 685 KOIs as false positives via ephemeris matching based on Q1-Q12 data. | COUGHLIN J.L., THOMPSON S.E., BRYSON S.T., et al. | ||
2015A&A...575A..71A | 1207 | D | S X C | 29 | 13 | 18 | SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates. XV. KOI-614b, KOI-206b, and KOI-680b: a massive warm Jupiter orbiting a G0 metallic dwarf and two highly inflated planets with a distant companion around evolved F-type stars. | ALMENARA J.M., DAMIANI C., BOUCHY F., et al. | |
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. | ||
2015MNRAS.450.1879E | 17 | D | 1 | 50 | 153 | Limb darkening and exoplanets: testing stellar model atmospheres and identifying biases in transit parameters. | ESPINOZA N. and JORDAN A. | ||
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. | ||
2015ApJ...813..100O | 16 | D | 1 | 327 | 7 | Deep GALEX UV survey of the Kepler field. I. Point source catalog. | OLMEDO M., LLOYD J., MAMAJEK E.E., et al. | ||
2015ApJ...814..130M | 16 | D | 1 | 2846 | 162 | An increase in the mass of planetary systems around lower-mass stars. | MULDERS G.D., PASCUCCI I. and APAI D. | ||
2016AJ....151...68K | 16 | D | 1 | 2914 | 316 | Kepler eclipsing binary stars. VII. The catalog of eclipsing binaries found in the entire Kepler data set. | KIRK B., CONROY K., PRSA A., et al. | ||
2016ApJ...822...86M | 16 | D | 1 | 6130 | 337 | False positive probabilities for all Kepler objects of interest: 1284 newly validated planets and 428 likely false positives. | MORTON T.D., BRYSON S.T., COUGHLIN J.L., et al. | ||
2016ApJ...824...15V | 16 | D | 1 | 982 | 20 | Orbital circularization of hot and cool Kepler eclipsing binaries. | VAN EYLEN V., WINN J.N. and ALBRECHT S. | ||
2016ApJ...825...98H | 16 | D | 1 | 166 | 128 | Warm jupiters are less lonely than hot jupiters: close neighbors. | HUANG C., WU Y. and TRIAUD A.H.M.J. | ||
2017AJ....153...71F | 16 | D | 1 | 3575 | 164 | The Kepler follow-up observation program. I. A catalog of companions to Kepler stars from high-resolution imaging. | FURLAN E., CIARDI D.R., EVERETT M.E., et al. | ||
2017MNRAS.465.2634A | 16 | D | 1 | 5400 | 21 | Transit shapes and self-organizing maps as a tool for ranking planetary candidates: application to Kepler and K2. | ARMSTRONG D.J., POLLACCO D. and SANTERNE A. | ||
2017A&A...602A.107B | 16 | D | 2 | 476 | 185 | The GAPS Programme with HARPS-N at TNG. XIV. Investigating giant planet migration history via improved eccentricity and mass determination for 231 transiting planets. | BONOMO A.S., DESIDERA S., BENATTI S., et al. | ||
2017AJ....154..250L | 16 | D | 1 | 2280 | 72 | Tidal synchronization and differential rotation of Kepler eclipsing binaries. | LURIE J.C., VYHMEISTER K., HAWLEY S.L., et al. | ||
2018ApJ...861..149F | 16 | D | 1 | 2261 | 6 | The Kepler Follow-up Observation Program. II. Stellar parameters from medium- and high-resolution spectroscopy. | FURLAN E., CIARDI D.R., COCHRAN W.D., et al. | ||
2018A&A...616A...7S | 16 | D | 1 | 4792 | 112 | Gaia Data Release 2. The catalogue of radial velocity standard stars. | SOUBIRAN C., JASNIEWICZ G., CHEMIN L., 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. | ||
2018PASJ...70...59T | 82 | C | 2 | 31 | 12 | Planets around the evolved stars 24 Boötis and {gam} Libra: A 30 d-period planet and a double giant-planet system in possible 7:3 MMR. | TAKARADA T., SATO B., OMIYA M., et al. | ||
2019AJ....158..190H | 17 | D | 1 | 343 | 61 | Hot Jupiters are destroyed by tides while their host stars are on the main sequence. | HAMER J.H. and SCHLAUFMAN K.C. | ||
2019A&A...631A.152A | 17 | D | 2 | 121 | ~ | Dusty phenomena in the vicinity of giant exoplanets. | ARKHYPOV O.V., KHODACHENKO M.L. and HANSLMEIER A. | ||
2020ApJ...890...23L | 17 | D | 1 | 4935 | 35 | Current population statistics do not favor photoevaporation over core-powered mass loss as the dominant cause of the exoplanet radius gap. | LOYD R.O.P., SHKOLNIK E.L., SCHNEIDER A.C., et al. | ||
2020A&A...638A.143A | 17 | D | 1 | 193 | ~ | Variability of transit light curves of Kepler objects of interest. | ARKHYPOV O.V., KHODACHENKO M.L. and HANSLMEIER A. | ||
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. | ||
2021AJ....162...98B | 17 | D | 1 | 2175 | ~ | Seeking echoes of circumstellar disks in Kepler light curves. | BROMLEY B.C., LEONARD A., QUINTANILLA A., et al. | ||
2023MNRAS.519.3723M | 19 | D | 2 | 48 | 1 | Limb darkening measurements from TESS and Kepler light curves of transiting exoplanets. | MAXTED P.F.L. |