KOI-903 , the SIMBAD biblio

KOI-903 , the SIMBAD biblio (22 results) C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.19CEST21:33:17


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Title First 3 Authors
2011ApJ...728..117B viz 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 viz 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 viz 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 viz 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.
2012ApJS..199...24T viz 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 viz 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 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.
2012ApJ...756..186S viz 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.
2013ApJS..208...16M viz 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.
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.
2014AJ....147..119C viz 16       D               1 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.
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...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.
2016ApJ...822...86M viz 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.
2017MNRAS.465.2634A viz 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...603A..30S viz 16       D               2 2500 58 Observational evidence for two distinct giant planet populations. SANTOS N.C., ADIBEKYAN V., FIGUEIRA P., et al.
2018AJ....155..161Z viz 16       D               2 1274 24 Robo-AO Kepler survey. IV. The effect of nearby stars on 3857 planetary candidate systems. ZIEGLER C., LAW N.M., BARANEC C., 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.
2020ApJ...890...23L viz 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 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.

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