Kepler-9: A System of Multiple Planets Transiting a Sun-Like Star, Confirmed by Timing Variations

Extra Exoplanet? A planet is said to transit its star if it can be seen to pass in front of the star; 19% of the known extrasolar planets are transiting planets. A lone planet will transit in an exactly periodic manner; if other planets are present, however, variations in transit duration are expected because of gravitational interactions. Holman et al. (p. 51, published online 26 August; see the cover; see the Perspective by Laughlin) report timing variations in the transits of two exoplanets detected by the Kepler space telescope. The planets have masses similar to that of Saturn and transit the same Sun-like star. A third planet several times the mass of Earth may also transit the star in an interior orbit. Two Saturn-size planets show variations in the times they take to transit their star due to gravitational interaction. The Kepler spacecraft is monitoring more than 150,000 stars for evidence of planets transiting those stars. We report the detection of two Saturn-size planets that transit the same Sun-like star, based on 7 months of Kepler observations. Their 19.2- and 38.9-day periods are presently increasing and decreasing at respective average rates of 4 and 39 minutes per orbit; in addition, the transit times of the inner body display an alternating variation of smaller amplitude. These signatures are characteristic of gravitational interaction of two planets near a 2:1 orbital resonance. Six radial-velocity observations show that these two planets are the most massive objects orbiting close to the star and substantially improve the estimates of their masses. After removing the signal of the two confirmed giant planets, we identified an additional transiting super-Earth–size planet candidate with a period of 1.6 days.

[1]  J. Lissauer Time for gas planets to grow , 2001, Nature.

[2]  Matthew J. Holman,et al.  The Use of Transit Timing to Detect Terrestrial-Mass Extrasolar Planets , 2005, Science.

[3]  et al,et al.  The CoRoT space mission : early results Special feature Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission VIII . CoRoT-7 b : the first super-Earth with measured radius , 2009 .

[4]  F. Marzari,et al.  Planet–planet scattering in circumstellar gas disks , 2010, 1005.0710.

[5]  Daniel C. Fabrycky,et al.  Submitted to ApJ , 1999 .

[6]  John C. Geary,et al.  INSTRUMENT PERFORMANCE IN KEPLER's FIRST MONTHS , 2010, 1001.0216.

[7]  E. Agol,et al.  DHP Framework: Digital Health Passports Using Blockchain - Use case on international tourism during the COVID-19 pandemic , 2004, ArXiv.

[8]  S. Seager,et al.  A FRAMEWORK FOR QUANTIFYING THE DEGENERACIES OF EXOPLANET INTERIOR COMPOSITIONS , 2009, 0912.3288.

[9]  R. Paul Butler,et al.  The 2:1 Resonant Exoplanetary System Orbiting HD 73526 , 2006, astro-ph/0602557.

[10]  D. Queloz,et al.  The CORALIE survey for southern extra-solar planets. XII. Orbital solutions for 16 extra-solar planets discovered with CORALIE , 2003, astro-ph/0310316.

[11]  W. Benz,et al.  Birth and fate of hot-Neptune planets , 2005, astro-ph/0512091.

[12]  E. Chiang,et al.  Brownian Motion in Planetary Migration , 2006, astro-ph/0607203.

[13]  J. Papaloizou,et al.  Migration and the Formation of Systems of Hot Super-Earths and Neptunes , 2006, astro-ph/0609779.

[14]  Harold F. Levison,et al.  Dynamics of the Giant Planets of the Solar System in the Gaseous Protoplanetary Disk and Their Relationship to the Current Orbital Architecture , 2007, 0706.1713.

[15]  J. Miralda-Escudé Orbital Perturbations of Transiting Planets: A Possible Method to Measure Stellar Quadrupoles and to Detect Earth-Mass Planets , 2001, astro-ph/0104034.

[16]  Z. Sándor,et al.  Stability and formation of the resonant system HD 73526 , 2007, 0706.2128.

[17]  Lars Hernquist,et al.  MINIMUM RADII OF SUPER-EARTHS: CONSTRAINTS FROM GIANT IMPACTS , 2010, 1003.0451.

[18]  S. Peale,et al.  Dynamics and Origin of the 2:1 Orbital Resonances of the GJ 876 Planets , 2001, astro-ph/0108104.

[19]  V. Orlov,et al.  Instability of close triple systems with coplanar initial doubly circular motion , 1994 .

[20]  T. Owen,et al.  KEPLER MISSION DESIGN, REALIZED PHOTOMETRIC PERFORMANCE, AND EARLY SCIENCE , 2010, 1001.0268.

[21]  A. Bloch,et al.  Turbulence Implies that Mean Motion Resonances are Rare , 2008 .

[22]  F. Rasio,et al.  RESONANCE TRAPPING IN PROTOPLANETARY DISKS. I. COPLANAR SYSTEMS , 2008, 0801.1926.

[23]  Diana Valencia,et al.  Detailed Models of Super-Earths: How Well Can We Infer Bulk Properties? , 2007, 0704.3454.

[24]  Astrophysics,et al.  Systemic: A Testbed for Characterizing the Detection of Extrasolar Planets. I. The Systemic Console Package , 2009, 0907.1675.

[25]  A. Prsa,et al.  PRE-SPECTROSCOPIC FALSE-POSITIVE ELIMINATION OF KEPLER PLANET CANDIDATES , 2010, 1001.0392.

[26]  J. Laskar,et al.  The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets - XIX. Characterization and dynamics of the GJ 876 planetary system , 2010, 1001.4774.

[27]  S. Seager,et al.  Mass-Radius Relationships for Solid Exoplanets , 2007, 0707.2895.

[28]  R. Paul Butler,et al.  Five New Multicomponent Planetary Systems , 2005 .

[29]  R. P. Butler,et al.  A Planet at 5 AU around 55 Cancri , 2002, astro-ph/0207294.

[30]  Z. Sándor,et al.  On the evolution of the resonant planetary system HD 128311 , 2006, astro-ph/0603664.

[31]  S. Seager,et al.  A Computational Tool to Interpret the Bulk Composition of Solid Exoplanets based on Mass and Radius Measurements , 2008, 0808.1916.

[32]  M. Marley,et al.  Planetary Radii across Five Orders of Magnitude in Mass and Stellar Insolation: Application to Transits , 2006, astro-ph/0612671.

[33]  M. Holman,et al.  A SEARCH FOR ADDITIONAL PLANETS IN THE NASA EPOXI OBSERVATIONS OF THE EXOPLANET SYSTEM GJ 436 , 2009, 0909.2875.

[34]  M. Lee Diversity and Origin of 2:1 Orbital Resonances in Extrasolar Planetary Systems , 2003, astro-ph/0401410.