KOI-72.02 , the SIMBAD biblio

KOI-72.02 , the SIMBAD biblio (120 results) C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.20CEST00:23:30


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Title First 3 Authors
2011ApJ...729...27B 2295       D S   X C       58 15 443 Kepler's first rocky planet: Kepler-10b. BATALHA N.M., BORUCKI W.J., BRYSON S.T., et al.
2011ApJS..197....2F viz 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.
2011ApJS..197....5F 2062 T   A S   X C       51 9 80
Kepler-10 c: a 2.2 earth radius transiting planet in a multiple system.
FRESSIN F., TORRES G., DESERT J.-M., et al.
2011ApJS..197....7C 40           X         1 27 148 Kepler-18b, c, and d: a system of three planets confirmed by transit timing variations, light curve validation, Warm-Spitzer photometry, and radial velocity measurements. COCHRAN W.D., FABRYCKY D.C., TORRES G., et al.
2011A&A...534A..26V 77           X         2 13 13 Spectroscopic characterization of the atmospheres of potentially habitable planets: Gl 581 d as a model case study. VON PARIS P., CABRERA J., GODOLT M., et al.
2011MNRAS.417.2166S 17       D               1 80 387 Homogeneous studies of transiting extrasolar planets – IV. Thirty systems with space-based light curves. SOUTHWORTH J.
2011ApJ...743..200B 40           X         1 25 117 The Kepler-19 system: a transiting 2.2 r planet and a second planet detected via transit timing variations. BALLARD S., FABRYCKY D., FRESSIN F., et al.
2012ApJ...745...81F 77           X         2 13 10 Spitzer infrared observations and independent validation of the transiting super-earth CoRoT-7 b. FRESSIN F., TORRES G., PONT F., et al.
2012ApJ...750..113F viz 40           X         1 32 70 Transit timing observations from Kepler. II. Confirmation of two multiplanet systems via a non-parametric correlation analysis. FORD E.B., FABRYCKY D.C., STEFFEN J.H., et al.
2012MNRAS.422.2024J viz 40           X         1 63 151 The coronal X-ray-age relation and its implications for the evaporation of exoplanets. JACKSON A.P., DAVIS T.A. and WHEATLEY P.J.
2012A&A...541A..56M 40           X         1 15 55 Kepler KOI-13.01 - detection of beaming and ellipsoidal modulations pointing to a massive hot Jupiter. MAZEH T., NACHMANI G., SOKOL G., et al.
2012Natur.486..375B viz 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 viz 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.
2012A&A...547A.112M 18       D   O           1 29 212 Characterization of exoplanets from their formation. II. The planetary mass-radius relationship. MORDASINI C., ALIBERT Y., GEORGY C., et al.
2012ApJ...761....6M 18       D               1 31 210 An efficient automated validation procedure for exoplanet transit candidates. MORTON T.D.
2011PASP..123..412W viz 15       D               1 2897 398 The Exoplanet Orbit Database. WRIGHT J.T., KAKHOURI O., MARCY G.W., et al.
2012MNRAS.427.2239R 39           X         1 11 19 Spin-orbit coupling for tidally evolving super-Earths. RODRIGUEZ A., CALLEGARI N.Jr, MICHTCHENKO T.A., et al.
2013ApJS..204...24B viz 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.
2013MNRAS.430..951D 1115     A     X         29 10 8 Tidal evolution of the Kepler-10 system. DONG Y. and JI J.
2013ApJ...767...94S viz 16       D               1 267 74 A 1.1-1.9 GHz SETI survey of the Kepler field. I. A search for narrow-band emission from select targets. SIEMION A.P.V., DEMOREST P., KORPELA E., et al.
2013ApJ...767..127H viz 16       D               1 189 246 Fundamental properties of Kepler planet-candidate host stars using asteroseismology. HUBER D., CHAPLIN W.J., CHRISTENSEN-DALSGAARD J., et al.
2013A&A...552A.119S viz 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...770..131L 81           X         2 20 147 All six planets known to orbit Kepler-11 have low densities. LISSAUER J.J., JONTOF-HUTTER D., ROWE J.F., et al.
2013ApJ...773...98B 78           X         2 49 29 Exoplanet characterization by proxy: a transiting 2.15 RPlanet near the habitable zone of the late K dwarf Kepler-61. BALLARD S., CHARBONNEAU D., FRESSIN F., et al.
2014ApJ...781...67F 356           X C       8 5 21 Accurate parameters of the oldest known rocky-exoplanet hosting system: Kepler-10 revisited. FOGTMANN-SCHULZ A., HINRUP B., VAN EYLEN V., et al.
2014ApJS..210...19B viz 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.
2014ApJ...783....4W viz 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 viz 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...789..154D viz 2035     A S   X C       50 14 140 The Kepler-10 planetary system revisited by HARPS-N: a hot rocky world and a solid neptune-mass planet. DUMUSQUE X., BONOMO A.S., HAYWOOD R.D., et al.
2014ApJ...790...12B 39           X         1 32 37 Kepler-93b: a terrestrial world measured to within 120 km, and a test case for a new Spitzer observing mode. BALLARD S., CHAPLIN W.J., CHARBONNEAU D., et al.
2014ApJ...790..146F viz 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...792....1L 60       D     X         2 45 511 Understanding the mass-radius relation for sub-neptunes: radius as a proxy for composition. LOPEZ E.D. and FORTNEY J.J.
2014Natur.513..328M 25 38 Doppler spectroscopy as a path to the detection of Earth-like planets. MAYOR M., LOVIS C. and SANTOS N.C.
2014ApJ...794..133S 79           X         2 41 21 Statistical eclipses of close-in Kepler sub-saturns. SHEETS H.A. and DEMING D.
2014ApJ...795....7M 81           X         2 3 13 Tidal dissipation in a homogeneous spherical body. II. Three examples: Mercury, IO, and Kepler-10 b. MAKAROV V.V. and EFROIMSKY M.
2014ApJ...796..132D 50           X         1 8 189 SOAP 2.0: a tool to estimate the photometric and radial velocity variations induced by stellar spots and plages. DUMUSQUE X., BOISSE I. and SANTOS N.C.
2014MNRAS.444.1738T 157           X         4 5 3 On the formation of the Kepler-10 planetary system. TERQUEM C.
2013A&ARv..21...63T 78             C       1 105 89 Spectroscopy of planetary atmospheres in our Galaxy. TINETTI G., ENCRENAZ T. and COUSTENIS A.
2014ChA&A..38..186D 39           X         1 28 2 Tidal evolution of the Kepler candidate two-planet systems. DONG Y. and JI J.-H.
2014A&A...572A..51F 16       D               1 111 15 Revisiting the correlation between stellar activity and planetary surface gravity. FIGUEIRA P., OSHAGH M., ADIBEKYAN V.Z., et al.
2014A&A...572A..93H viz 29 9 Characterization of the four new transiting planets KOI-188b, KOI-195b, KOI-192b, and KOI-830b. HEBRARD G., SANTERNE A., MONTAGNIER G., et al.
2015ApJ...799L..26S 48           X         1 2 33 A continuum of planet formation between 1 and 4 earth radii. SCHLAUFMAN K.C.
2015ApJ...799..180S viz 16       D               1 431 118 A statistical reconstruction of the planet population around Kepler solar-type stars. SILBURT A., GAIDOS E. and WU Y.
2015ApJ...800...99T 41           X         1 31 94 Validation of 12 small Kepler transiting planets in the habitable zone. TORRES G., KIPPING D.M., FRESSIN F., et al.
2015ApJ...800..135D viz 125           X         3 15 184 The mass of Kepler-93b and the composition of terrestrial planets. DRESSING C.D., CHARBONNEAU D., DUMUSQUE X., et al.
2015ApJ...801...41R 124           X         3 52 558 Most 1.6 Earth-radius planets are not rocky. ROGERS L.A.
2015ApJS..217...16R viz 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...804...59D 214       D     X         6 83 29 Low false positive rate of Kepler candidates estimated from a combination of Spitzer and follow-up observations. DESERT J.-M., CHARBONNEAU D., TORRES G., et al.
2015ApJ...804...97C 40           X         1 31 20 Revision of earth-sized Kepler planet candidate properties with high-resolution imaging by the Hubble Space Telescope. CARTIER K.M.S., GILLILAND R.L., WRIGHT J.T., et al.
2015ApJ...806..183W viz 159           X         4 223 146 How rocky are they? the composition distribution of Kepler's Sub-Neptune planet candidates within 0.15 AU. WOLFGANG A. and LOPEZ E.
2015ApJ...808..126V 175       D     X         5 105 201 Eccentricity from transit photometry: small planets in Kepler multi-planet systems have low eccentricities. VAN EYLEN V. and ALBRECHT S.
2015ApJ...809....8B viz 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.
2015A&A...580L..13S 42           X         1 9 38 Constraining planet structure from stellar chemistry: the cases of CoRoT-7, Kepler-10, and Kepler-93. SANTOS N.C., ADIBEKYAN V., MORDASINI C., et al.
2015ApJ...807...45D viz 40           X         1 2707 726 The occurrence of potentially habitable planets orbiting M dwarfs estimated from the full Kepler dataset and an empirical measurement of the detection sensitivity. DRESSING C.D. and CHARBONNEAU D.
2015ApJ...813...14K 715     A D S   X         18 54 51 The hunt for exomoons with Kepler (HEK): V. A survey of 41 planetary candidates for exomoons. KIPPING D.M., SCHMITT A.R., HUANG X., et al.
2015MNRAS.452.1375W 119           X C       2 1 1 A variable polytrope index applied to planet and material models. WEPPNER S.P., McKELVEY J.P., THIELEN K.D., et al.
2015ApJ...814...91B viz 40           X         1 524 24 Comparative habitability of transiting exoplanets. BARNES R., MEADOWS V.S. and EVANS N.
2015RAA....15.1945S 40           X         1 108 113 Thirty Meter Telescope Detailed Science Case: 2015. SKIDMORE W.
2015A&A...584A..72M viz 79             C       1 75 108 The HARPS-N Rocky Planet Search. I. HD 219134b: A transiting rocky planet in a multi-planet system at 6.5 pc from the Sun. MOTALEBI F., UDRY S., GILLON M., et al.
2016ApJ...816...95G 43           X         1 10 33 The Kepler-454 system: a small, not-rocky inner planet, a jovian world, and a distant companion. GETTEL S., CHARBONNEAU D., DRESSING C.D., et al.
2016MNRAS.456.2636L viz 161           X         4 19 8 The detailed chemical composition of the terrestrial planet host Kepler-10. LIU F., YONG D., ASPLUND M., et al.
2016ApJ...819...83W 4618     A D S   X C       114 23 55 Revised masses and densities of the planets around Kepler-10. WEISS L.M., ROGERS L.A., ISAACSON H.T., 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...824..103F 40           X         1 14 5 Solubility of rock in steam atmospheres of planets. FEGLEY B., JACOBSON N.S., WILLIAMS K.B., et al.
2016ApJ...825...19W viz 18       D               1 99 221 Probabilistic mass-radius relationship for sub-Neptune-sized planets. WOLFGANG A., ROGERS L.A. and FORD E.B.
2016MNRAS.461.1841C 16       D               1 150 9 An upper boundary in the mass-metallicity plane of exo-Neptunes. COURCOL B., BOUCHY F. and DELEUIL M.
2016ApJ...830...43E 162           X         4 19 32 Discovery and validation of a high-density sub-Neptune from the K2 mission. ESPINOZA N., BRAHM R., JORDAN A., et al.
2016AJ....152..158T viz 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..204L viz 83               F     1 23 84 Kepler-21b: a rocky planet around a V = 8.25 magnitude star. LOPEZ-MORALES M., HAYWOOD R.D., COUGHLIN J.L., et al.
2017ApJ...839L...8M 59       D     X         2 14 31 The planetary mass-radius relation and its dependence on orbital period as measured by transit timing variations and radial velocities. MILLS S.M. and MAZEH T.
2017MNRAS.466.1868C viz 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 viz 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 viz 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 viz 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.
2017A&A...604A..19O 45           X         1 4 17 K2-110 b: a massive mini-Neptune exoplanet. OSBORN H.P., SANTERNE A., BARROS S.C.C., et al.
2017MNRAS.471L.125R 1490 T   A     X C       35 4 19 Pinning down the mass of
Kepler-10c: the importance of sampling and model comparison.
RAJPAUL V., BUCHHAVE L.A. and AIGRAIN S.
2017ApJ...850...93B 123           X C       2 8 12 Constraints on super-earth interiors from stellar abundances. BRUGGER B., MOUSIS O., DELEUIL M., et al.
2018AJ....155...48W viz 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.
2017A&A...608A..25B 42           X         1 6 10 Precise masses for the transiting planetary system HD 106315 with HARPS. BARROS S.C.C., GOSSELIN H., LILLO-BOX J., et al.
2017A&A...608A..35C viz 49           X         1 7 62 Characterization of the K2-18 multi-planetary system with HARPS. A habitable zone super-Earth and discovery of a second, warm super-Earth on a non-coplanar orbit. CLOUTIER R., ASTUDILLO-DEFRU N., DOYON R., et al.
2018A&A...609A..76Z 45           X         1 2 9 Planetary formation and water delivery in the habitable zone around solar-type stars in different dynamical environments. ZAIN P.S., DE ELIA G.C., RONCO M.P., et al.
2018AJ....155..148T 41           X         1 9 6 Magellan/PFS radial velocities of GJ 9827, a late K dwarf at 30 pc with three transiting super-Earths. TESKE J.K., WANG S., WOLFGANG A., et al.
2018MNRAS.479.4786V 18       D               1 117 318 An asteroseismic view of the radius valley: stripped cores, not born rocky. VAN EYLEN V., AGENTOFT C., LUNDKVIST M.S., et al.
2018ApJ...866...99B viz 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.
2018MNRAS.480.2411M 42           X         1 11 17 The first super-Earth detection from the high cadence and high radial velocity precision Dharma Planet Survey. MA B., GE J., MUTERSPAUGH M., et al.
2018AJ....156..254W viz 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 viz 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.
2019A&A...621A..49C viz 43           X         1 6 8 Confirmation of the radial velocity super-Earth K2-18c with HARPS and CARMENES. CLOUTIER R., ASTUDILLO-DEFRU N., DOYON R., et al.
2019A&A...622A..37U 85           X         2 34 41 The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets. XLIV. Eight HARPS multi-planet systems hosting 20 super-Earth and Neptune-mass companions. UDRY S., DUMUSQUE X., LOVIS C., et al.
2019RAA....19...41G viz 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 viz 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 viz 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 viz 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.
2019AJ....157..180P 229       D     X         6 14 46 Ultra-short-period planets from secular chaos. PETROVICH C., DEIBERT E. and WU Y.
2019AJ....157..235C viz 17       D               2 415 7 Observations of the Kepler field with TESS: predictions for planet yield and observable features. CHRIST C.N., MONTET B.T. and FABRYCKY D.C.
2019MNRAS.487..246Z 43           X         1 6 6 Accounting for multiplicity in calculating eta Earth. ZINK J.K. and HANSEN B.M.S.
2019MNRAS.488.3568P 167           X         4 13 ~ Low-eccentricity migration of ultra-short-period planets in multiplanet systems. PU B. and LAI D.
2019ApJ...883L..40K 42           X         1 44 ~ The habitability of GJ 357d: possible climate and observability. KALTENEGGER L., MADDEN J., LIN Z., et al.
2019A&A...630A.135U viz 17       D               1 501 16 Beyond the exoplanet mass-radius relation. ULMER-MOLL S., SANTOS N.C., FIGUEIRA P., et al.
2019A&A...631A..90L viz 44           X         1 10 24 Exoplanet characterisation in the longest known resonant chain: the K2-138 system seen by HARPS. LOPEZ T.A., BARROS S.C.C., SANTERNE A., et al.
2019MNRAS.489.5928D 84             C       1 21 ~ A transiting super-Earth close to the inner edge of the habitable zone of an M0 dwarf star. DIEZ ALONSO E., GONZALEZ HERNANDEZ J.I., TOLEDO-PADRON B., et al.
2020AJ....159...41T viz 17       D               1 564 ~ Estimating planetary mass with deep learning. TASKER E.J., LANEUVILLE M. and GUTTENBERG N.
2020MNRAS.491.5287O viz 17       D               2 127 43 Testing exoplanet evaporation with multitransiting systems. OWEN J.E. and CAMPOS ESTRADA B.
2020MNRAS.492.4019P 553           X C       12 6 ~ Trend filtering - II. Denoising astronomical signals with varying degrees of smoothness. POLITSCH C.A., CISEWSKI-KEHE J., CROFT R.A.C., et al.
2020A&A...634A..43O 17       D               1 141 104 Revisited mass-radius relations for exoplanets below 120 M. OTEGI J.F., BOUCHY F. and HELLED R.
2020AJ....160..108B viz 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.
2020A&A...642A.173N 171           X         4 35 53 The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs. Two planets on opposite sides of the radius gap transiting the nearby M dwarf LTT 3780. NOWAK G., LUQUE R., PARVIAINEN H., et al.
2020MNRAS.499.5004M viz 45           X         1 7 20 K2-111: an old system with two planets in near-resonance. MORTIER A., ZAPATERO OSORIO M.R., MALAVOLTA L., et al.
2021AJ....161...56W viz 90           X         2 9 29 The TESS-Keck survey. II. An ultra-short-period rocky planet and its siblings transiting the galactic thick-disk star TOI-561. WEISS L.M., DAI F., HUBER D., et al.
2021MNRAS.503.1248A viz 46           X         1 4 11 The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets - XLV. Two Neptune mass planets orbiting HD 13808: a study of stellar activity modelling's impact on planet detection. AHRER E., QUELOZ D., RAJPAUL V.M., et al.
2021MNRAS.503.2825H 17       D               1 79 ~ Implications of an improved water equation of state for water-rich planets. HUANG C., RICE D.R., GRANDE Z.M., et al.
2021MNRAS.503.4092B 17       D               1 124 ~ Revisiting the Kepler field with TESS: Improved ephemerides using TESS 2 min data. BATTLEY M.P., KUNIMOTO M., ARMSTRONG D.J., et al.
2021MNRAS.507.1847R viz 87           X         2 11 9 A HARPS-N mass for the elusive Kepler-37d: a case study in disentangling stellar activity and planetary signals. RAJPAUL V.M., BUCHHAVE L.A., LACEDELLI G., et al.
2021ApJ...921...24S viz 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.
2022A&A...658A.176H 134           X   F     2 15 3 HD 207897 b: A dense sub-Neptune transiting a nearby and bright K-type star. HEIDARI N., BOISSE I., ORELL-MIQUEL J., et al.
2023MNRAS.519.6028R 19       D               1 86 7 Exoplanet atmosphere evolution: emulation with neural networks. ROGERS J.G., MUNOZ C.J., OWEN J.E., et al.
2023A&A...677A..33B viz 112       D     X         3 120 ~ Cold Jupiters and improved masses in 38 Kepler and K2 small planet systems from 3661 HARPS-N radial velocities No excess of cold Jupiters in small planet systems. BONOMO A.S., DUMUSQUE X., MASSA A., et al.
2024AJ....167...20Z 20       D               1 230 ~ The Breakthrough Listen Search for Intelligent Life: Detection and Characterization of Anomalous Transits in Kepler Lightcurves. ZUCKERMAN A., DAVENPORT J.R.A., CROFT S., 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.

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