K2-288Bb: A Small Temperate Planet in a Low-mass Binary System Discovered by Citizen Scientists

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Issue Date
2019-01-07Author
Feinstein, Adina D.
Schlieder, Joshua E.
Livingston, John H.
Ciardi, David R.
Howard, Andrew W.
Arnold, Lauren
Barentsen, Geert
Bristow, Makennah
Christiansen, Jessie L.
Crossfield, Ian
Dressing, Courtney D.
Gonzales, Erica J.
Kosiarek, Molly
Lintott, Chris J.
Miller, Grant
Morales, Farisa Y.
Petigura, Erik A.
Thackeray, Beverly
Ault, Joanne
Baeten, Elisabeth
Jonkeren, Alexander F.
Langley, James
Moshinaly, Houssen
Pearson, Kirk
Tanner, Christopher
Treasure, Joanna
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
© 2019. The American Astronomical Society.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Observations from the Kepler and K2 missions have provided the astronomical community with unprecedented amounts of data to search for transiting exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena. Here, we present K2-288, a low-mass binary system (M2.0 ± 1.0; M3.0 ± 1.0) hosting a small (R p = 1.9 R ⊕), temperate (T eq = 226 K) planet observed in K2 Campaign 4. The candidate was first identified by citizen scientists using Exoplanet Explorers hosted on the Zooniverse platform. Follow-up observations and detailed analyses validate the planet and indicate that it likely orbits the secondary star on a 31.39-day period. This orbit places K2-288Bb in or near the habitable zone of its low-mass host star. K2-288Bb resides in a system with a unique architecture, as it orbits at >0.1 au from one component in a moderate separation binary (a proj ~ 55 au), and further follow-up may provide insight into its formation and evolution. Additionally, its estimated size straddles the observed gap in the planet radius distribution. Planets of this size occur less frequently and may be in a transient phase of radius evolution. K2-288 is the third transiting planet system identified by the Exoplanet Explorers program and its discovery exemplifies the value of citizen science in the era of Kepler, K2, and the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite.
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Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
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Citation
Adina D. Feinstein et al 2019 AJ 157 40
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