Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by | Planet Hunters |
Discovery site | Kepler space telescope |
Discovery date | 15 October 2012 [2] |
Transit[2] | |
Orbital characteristics | |
0.634 ± 0.011 [3] AU | |
138.506+0.107 −0.092[3] d | |
Semi-amplitude | (20.69±0.31)×103[3] |
Star | Kepler-64 / PH1 [1] |
Physical characteristics | |
6.18±0.17[3] R🜨 | |
Mass | 0.08–0.14 [3] MJ (20–50 [3] ME) |
Temperature | 481 K (208 °C; 406 °F) |
PH1b (standing for "Planet Hunters 1"), or by its NASA designation Kepler-64b,[4] is an extrasolar planet found in a circumbinary orbit in the quadruple star system Kepler-64. The planet was discovered by two amateur astronomers from the Planet Hunters project of amateur astronomers using data from the Kepler space telescope with assistance of a Yale University team of international astronomers. The discovery was announced on 15 October 2012.[5][6] It is the first known transiting planet in a quadruple star system,[7] first known circumbinary planet in a quadruple star system,[8] and the first planet in a quadruple star system found. It was the first confirmed planet discovered by PlanetHunters.org.[2] An independent and nearly simultaneous detection was also reported from a revision of Kepler space telescope data using a transit detection algorithm.[9]
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