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Kepler-9d

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Super-Earth orbiting Kepler-9

Kepler-9d
Kepler-9d with Earth and Jupiter compared to size.
Discovery[1]
Discovery date1 January 2011
Transit (Kepler Mission)
Orbital characteristics
0.02730 AU (4,084,000 km)
Eccentricity0[2]
1.592851[2]d
StarKepler-9 (KOI-377)
Physical characteristics
1.64[3]R🜨
Temperature2026[2]

Kepler-9d (formerly known asKOI-377.03) is a planet in orbit around the Sun-like starKepler-9. Initially discovered byKepler space telescope, aterrestrial planet-searching satellite built and operated byNASA, Kepler-9d is most likely a Super-Earth, with an estimated radius approximately 60% larger than that of Earth's, although its exact mass cannot be determined. Kepler-9d orbits Kepler-9 every 1.56 days at a distance of .0273AU from its star, an extremely close distance. Although Kepler-9d is the closest planet to its star in its system, it is named Kepler-9d instead of Kepler-9b because two gas giants,Kepler-9b andKepler-9c, were confirmed first. The original studies into the system first suggested that Kepler-9d might be a planet, but a follow-up investigation made by the Kepler team later confirmed that it was; the confirmation of Kepler-9d as a planet was made public with the team's paper, which was published in theAstrophysical Journal on January 1, 2011. The team used telescopes at theW.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii to follow up on the Kepler space telescope's initial discovery.

Discovery and name

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Kepler-9d's name comes from it being the third planet discovered in the orbit of Kepler-9. Kepler-9 was named for the Kepler spacecraft, a NASA satellite that aims to discover terrestrial planets intransit around, or crossing in front of, their host stars as seen from Earth. This transit causes a regular interval in which the star briefly and slightly dims as the planet crosses it.[4]

Flagged initially as a transit event by the satellite, Kepler-9d was given the designation KOI 377.03. It was recognized as a potential planet after a study into the system confirmed Kepler-9b and Kepler-9c, but follow-up studies had to be completed to verify that it was indeed a planet, and that the apparent transit event was not due to a backgroundeclipsing binary star in the aperture of Kepler'sphotometer. Kepler's team exhaustively disproved that the small transit event could have been anything but a planet, and their results were published in the Astrophysical Journal on January 1, 2011.[1] Follow-up observations were conducted by theHigh Resolution Echelle Spectrometer at the W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, as well as theWIYN Observatory in Arizona and thePalomar Observatory in California.[1]

Host star

[edit]
Main article:Kepler-9

Kepler-9 is a Sun-like star in the constellation Lyra that lies some 640parsecs away from Earth. With a mass of 1.07 M and a radius of 1.02 R, Kepler-9 is almost exactly the same size and width of the Sun, being only 7% more massive and 2% wider. Kepler-9 has aneffective temperature of 5777 (± 61)K, as compared to the Sun's at 5778 K,[5] and is approximately 32% moremetal-rich (in terms of iron) than the Sun. Kepler-9 is younger than the Sun, and is estimated to be one billion years old.[1] Kepler-9 has two planets other than Kepler-9d: the gas giants Kepler-9b and Kepler-9c.[3]

Characteristics

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Based on the size of its light curve, Kepler-9d is assumed to be aSuper-Earth, although its exact mass is not known. It is presumed to be at least 1.5Earth masses.[1] The planet's radius is inferred to be 1.64RE, or approximately 64% larger than Earth's radius. With anequilibrium temperature of 2026 K, it is hotter than all the previous planets discovered by Kepler (not counting the three previously discovered ones located in its field of view). Its density is not known.[2] With anaverage distance of .0273AU (2,537,695.73 miles) from its star, which it orbits every 1.592851 days, Kepler-9d is the closest planet to its star in the Kepler-9 system.[3] To compare, the planetMercury is .3871 AU away from the Sun, which it orbits every 87.97 days.[6]

References

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  1. ^abcdeTorres, Guillermo; et al. (2011). "Modeling Kepler Transit Light Curves as False Positives: Rejection of Blend Scenarios for Kepler-9, and Validation of Kepler-9 d, A Super-earth-size Planet in a Multiple System".The Astrophysical Journal.727 (1). 24.arXiv:1008.4393.Bibcode:2011ApJ...727...24T.doi:10.1088/0004-637X/727/1/24.S2CID 6358297.
  2. ^abcd"Kepler Discoveries".Kepler Mission.NASA. 2011. Archived fromthe original on 2010-05-27. Retrieved20 March 2011.
  3. ^abc"Notes for Planet Kepler-9 d".Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia. 2010. Retrieved6 February 2011.
  4. ^"Kepler: About the Mission".Kepler Mission.NASA. 2010. Archived fromthe original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved20 March 2011.
  5. ^David Williams (1 September 2004)."Sun Fact Sheet".Goddard Space Flight Center.NASA. Retrieved20 March 2011.
  6. ^David Williams (17 November 2010)."Mercury Fact Sheet".Goddard Space Flight Center.NASA. Retrieved20 March 2011.
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