Discovery[1] | |
---|---|
Discovery date | 2 February 2011[2] |
Transit (Kepler Mission)[2] | |
Orbital characteristics | |
.106 AU (15,900,000 km) | |
13.02502[3] d | |
Inclination | 89[3] |
Star | Kepler-11 (KOI-157) |
Physical characteristics | |
3.15 (± .30)[1] R🜨 | |
Mass | 13.5+4.8 −6.1[1] ME |
Mean density | 2.3 +1.3 −1.1[1] g cm−3 |
Temperature | 833 K (560 °C; 1,040 °F)[3] |
Kepler-11c is an exoplanet discovered in the orbit of the Sun-like star Kepler-11 by the Kepler space telescope, a NASA telescope aiming to discover Earth-like planets. It is the second planet from its star, and is most likely a water planet with a thin hydrogen–helium atmosphere.[2] Kepler-11c orbits Kepler-11 every 10 days, and has an estimated density twice that of pure water. It is estimated to have a mass thirteen times that of Earth and a radius three times that of Earth. Kepler-11c and its five sister planets form the first discovered system with more than three transiting planets. The Kepler-11 system also holds the record of being the most compact and the flattest system discovered.[4] Kepler-11c and the other Kepler-11 planets were announced to the public on February 2, 2011, and was published in Nature a day later.
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