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Featured researches published by Christopher K. Middour.


Science | 2011

Kepler-16: a transiting circumbinary planet.

Laurance R. Doyle; Joshua A. Carter; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Robert W. Slawson; Steve B. Howell; Joshua N. Winn; Jerome A. Orosz; Andrej Prˇsa; William F. Welsh; Samuel N. Quinn; David W. Latham; Guillermo Torres; Lars A. Buchhave; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Jonathan J. Fortney; Avi Shporer; Eric B. Ford; Jack J. Lissauer; Darin Ragozzine; Michael Rucker; Natalie M. Batalha; Jon M. Jenkins; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; Christopher K. Middour; Jennifer R. Hall; Sean McCauliff; Michael N. Fanelli; Elisa V. Quintana; Matthew J. Holman

An exoplanet has been observed, comparable in size and mass to Saturn, that orbits a pair of stars. We report the detection of a planet whose orbit surrounds a pair of low-mass stars. Data from the Kepler spacecraft reveal transits of the planet across both stars, in addition to the mutual eclipses of the stars, giving precise constraints on the absolute dimensions of all three bodies. The planet is comparable to Saturn in mass and size and is on a nearly circular 229-day orbit around its two parent stars. The eclipsing stars are 20 and 69% as massive as the Sun and have an eccentric 41-day orbit. The motions of all three bodies are confined to within 0.5° of a single plane, suggesting that the planet formed within a circumbinary disk.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

OVERVIEW OF THE KEPLER SCIENCE PROCESSING PIPELINE

Jon M. Jenkins; Douglas A. Caldwell; Hema Chandrasekaran; Joseph D. Twicken; Stephen T. Bryson; Elisa V. Quintana; Bruce D. Clarke; Jie Li; Christopher Allen; Peter Tenenbaum; Hayley Wu; Todd C. Klaus; Christopher K. Middour; Miles T. Cote; Sean McCauliff; Forrest R. Girouard; Jay P. Gunter; Bill Wohler; Jeneen Sommers; Jennifer R. Hall; Akm Kamal Uddin; Michael S. Wu; Paresh Bhavsar; Jeffrey Edward van Cleve; David L. Pletcher; Jessie A. Dotson; Michael R. Haas; Ronald L. Gilliland; David G. Koch; William J. Borucki

The Kepler Mission Science Operations Center (SOC) performs several critical functions including managing the ~156,000 target stars, associated target tables, science data compression tables and parameters, as well as processing the raw photometric data downlinked from the spacecraft each month. The raw data are first calibrated at the pixel level to correct for bias, smear induced by a shutterless readout, and other detector and electronic effects. A background sky flux is estimated from ~4500 pixels on each of the 84 CCD readout channels, and simple aperture photometry is performed on an optimal aperture for each star. Ancillary engineering data and diagnostic information extracted from the science data are used to remove systematic errors in the flux time series that are correlated with these data prior to searching for signatures of transiting planets with a wavelet-based, adaptive matched filter. Stars with signatures exceeding 7.1? are subjected to a suite of statistical tests including an examination of each stars centroid motion to reject false positives caused by background eclipsing binaries. Physical parameters for each planetary candidate are fitted to the transit signature, and signatures of additional transiting planets are sought in the residual light curve. The pipeline is operational, finding planetary signatures and providing robust eliminations of false positives.


Science | 2011

KOI-126: A Triply Eclipsing Hierarchical Triple with Two Low-Mass Stars

Joshua A. Carter; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Darin Ragozzine; Matthew J. Holman; Samuel N. Quinn; David W. Latham; Lars A. Buchhave; Jeffrey Edward van Cleve; William D. Cochran; Miles T. Cote; Michael Endl; Eric B. Ford; Michael R. Haas; Jon M. Jenkins; David G. Koch; Jie Li; Jack J. Lissauer; Phillip J. MacQueen; Christopher K. Middour; Jerome A. Orosz; Jason F. Rowe; Jason H. Steffen; William F. Welsh

The Kepler telescope detected a triple stellar system and reveals details of the structure of low-mass stars. The Kepler spacecraft has been monitoring the light from 150,000 stars in its primary quest to detect transiting exoplanets. Here, we report on the detection of an eclipsing stellar hierarchical triple, identified in the Kepler photometry. KOI-126 [A, (B, C)], is composed of a low-mass binary [masses MB = 0.2413 ± 0.0030 solar mass (M☉), MC = 0.2127 ± 0.0026 M☉; radii RB = 0.2543 ± 0.0014 solar radius (R☉), RC = 0.2318 ± 0.0013 R☉; orbital period P1 = 1.76713 ± 0.00019 days] on an eccentric orbit about a third star (mass MA = 1.347 ± 0.032 M☉; radius RA = 2.0254 ± 0.0098 R☉; period of orbit around the low-mass binary P2 = 33.9214 ± 0.0013 days; eccentricity of that orbit e2 = 0.3043 ± 0.0024). The low-mass pair probe the poorly sampled fully convective stellar domain offering a crucial benchmark for theoretical stellar models.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Asteroseismology of old open clusters with Kepler: direct estimate of the integrated red giant branch mass-loss in NGC 6791 and 6819

A. Miglio; K. Brogaard; D. Stello; W. J. Chaplin; F. D’Antona; Josefina Montalban; Sarbani Basu; A. Bressan; F. Grundahl; Marc H. Pinsonneault; Aldo M. Serenelli; Y. Elsworth; S. Hekker; T. Kallinger; B. Mosser; P. Ventura; Alfio Bonanno; A. Noels; V. Silva Aguirre; R. Szabó; Jie Li; Sean McCauliff; Christopher K. Middour; Hans Kjeldsen

Mass-loss of red giant branch (RGB) stars is still poorly determined, despite its crucial role in the chemical enrichment of galaxies. Thanks to the recent detection of solar-like oscillations in G–K giants in open clusters with Kepler, we can now directly determine stellar masses for a statistically significant sample of stars in the old open clusters NGC 6791 and 6819. The aim of this work is to constrain the integrated RGB mass-loss by comparing the average mass of stars in the red clump (RC) with that of stars in the low-luminosity portion of the RGB [i.e. stars with L L(RC)]. Stellar masses were determined by combining the available seismic parameters νmax and �ν with additional photometric constraints and with independent distance estimates. We measured the masses of 40 stars on the RGB and 19 in the RC of the old metal-rich cluster NGC 6791. We find that the difference between the average mass of RGB and RC stars is small, but significant [� M = 0.09 ± 0.03 (random) ±0.04 (systematic)


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Transit timing observations from Kepler - III. : Confirmation of four multiple planet systems by a Fourier-domain study of anticorrelated transit timing variations

Jason H. Steffen; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Eric B. Ford; Joshua A. Carter; J.-M. Desert; Francois Fressin; Matthew J. Holman; Jack J. Lissauer; Althea V. Moorhead; Jason F. Rowe; Darin Ragozzine; William F. Welsh; Natalie M. Batalha; William J. Borucki; Lars A. Buchhave; Steve Bryson; Douglas A. Caldwell; David Charbonneau; David R. Ciardi; William D. Cochran; Michael Endl; Mark E. Everett; Thomas N. Gautier; R. L. Gilliland; Forrest R. Girouard; Jon M. Jenkins; Elliott P. Horch; Steve B. Howell; Howard Isaacson; Todd C. Klaus

We present a method to confirm the planetary nature of objects in systems with multiple transiting exoplanet candidates. This method involves a Fourier-domain analysis of the deviations in the transit times from a constant period that result from dynamical interactions within the system. The combination of observed anticorrelations in the transit times and mass constraints from dynamical stability allow us to claim the discovery of four planetary systems, Kepler-25, Kepler-26, Kepler-27 and Kepler-28, containing eight planets and one additional planet candidate.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

Characterization of the power excess of solar-like oscillations in red giants with Kepler

B. Mosser; Y. Elsworth; S. Hekker; D. Huber; T. Kallinger; S. Mathur; K. Belkacem; M. J. Goupil; R. Samadi; C. Barban; Timothy R. Bedding; W. J. Chaplin; R. A. García; D. Stello; J. De Ridder; Christopher K. Middour; Robert L. Morris; Elisa V. Quintana

Context. The space mission Kepler provides us with long and uninterrupted photometric time series of red giants. This allows us to examine their seismic global properties and to compare these with theoretical predictions. Aims. We aim to describe the oscillation power excess observed in red giant oscillation spectra with global seismic parameters, and to investigate empirical scaling relations governing these parameters. From these scalings relations, we derive new physical properties of red giant oscillations. Methods. Various different methods were compared in order to validate the processes and to derive reliable output values. For consistency, a single method was then used to determine scaling relations for the relevant global asteroseismic parameters: mean mode height, mean height of the background signal superimposed on the oscillation power excess, width of the power excess, bolometric amplitude of the radial modes and visibility of non-radial modes. A method for deriving oscillation amplitudes is proposed, which relies on the complete identification of the red giant oscillation spectrum. Results. The comparison of the different methods has shown the important role of the way the background is modelled. The convergence reached by the collaborative work enables us to derive significant results concerning the oscillation power excess. We obtain several scaling relations, and identify the influence of the stellar mass and the evolutionary status. The effect of helium burning on the red giant interior structure is confirmed: it yields a strong mass-radius relation for clump stars. We find that none of the amplitude scaling relations motivated by physical considerations predict the observed mode amplitudes of red giant stars. In parallel, the degree-dependent mode visibility exhibits important variations. Both effects seem related to the significant influence of the high mode mass of non-radial mixed modes. A family of red giants with very weak dipole modes is identified, and its properties are analyzed. Conclusions. The clear correlation between the power densities of the background signal and of the stellar oscillation induces important consequences to be considered for deriving a reliable theoretical relation of the mode amplitude. As a by-product of this work, we have verified that red giant asteroseismology delivers new insights for stellar and Galactic physics, given the evidence for mass loss at the tip of the red giant branch.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

Kepler-21b: A 1.6 R Earth Planet Transiting the Bright Oscillating F Subgiant Star HD?179070

Steve B. Howell; Jason F. Rowe; Stephen T. Bryson; Samuel N. Quinn; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Howard Isaacson; David R. Ciardi; W. J. Chaplin; T. S. Metcalfe; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; T. Appourchaux; Sarbani Basu; O. L. Creevey; Ronald L. Gilliland; P.-O. Quirion; Denis Stello; Hans Kjeldsen; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; Y. Elsworth; R. A. García; G. Houdek; C. Karoff; J. Molenda-Żakowicz; M. J. Thompson; G. A. Verner; Guillermo Torres; Francois Fressin; Justin R. Crepp; Elisabeth R. Adams; Andrea K. Dupree

We present Kepler observations of the bright (V = 8.3), oscillating star HD 179070. The observations show transit-like events which reveal that the star is orbited every 2.8 days by a small, 1.6 R Earth object. Seismic studies of HD 179070 using short cadence Kepler observations show that HD 179070 has a frequency-power spectrum consistent with solar-like oscillations that are acoustic p-modes. Asteroseismic analysis provides robust values for the mass and radius of HD 179070, 1.34 ± 0.06 M ☉ and 1.86 ± 0.04 R ☉, respectively, as well as yielding an age of 2.84 ± 0.34 Gyr for this F5 subgiant. Together with ground-based follow-up observations, analysis of the Kepler light curves and image data, and blend scenario models, we conservatively show at the >99.7% confidence level (3σ) that the transit event is caused by a 1.64 ± 0.04 R Earth exoplanet in a 2.785755 ± 0.000032 day orbit. The exoplanet is only 0.04 AU away from the star and our spectroscopic observations provide an upper limit to its mass of ~10 M Earth (2σ). HD 179070 is the brightest exoplanet host star yet discovered by Kepler.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

Discovery and Rossiter-McLaughlin Effect of Exoplanet Kepler-8b

Jon M. Jenkins; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; Geoffrey W. Marcy; William D. Cochran; William F. Welsh; Gibor Basri; Natalie M. Batalha; Lars A. Buchhave; Timothy M. Brown; Douglas A. Caldwell; Edward W. Dunham; Michael Endl; Debra A. Fischer; Thomas N. Gautier; John C. Geary; Ronald L. Gilliland; Steve B. Howell; Howard Isaacson; John Asher Johnson; David W. Latham; Jack J. Lissauer; David G. Monet; Jason F. Rowe; Dimitar D. Sasselov; Andrew W. Howard; Phillip J. MacQueen; Jerome A. Orosz; Hema Chandrasekaran; Joseph D. Twicken

We report on the discovery and the Rossiter-McLaughlin (R-M) effect of Kepler-8b, a transiting planet identified by the NASA Kepler Mission. Kepler photometry and Keck-HIRES radial velocities yield the radius and mass of the planet around this F8IV subgiant host star. The planet has a radius R_P = 1.419 R_J and a mass M_P = 0.60 M_J, yielding a density of 0.26 g cm^(–3), one of the lowest planetary densities known. The orbital period is P = 3.523 days and the orbital semimajor axis is 0.0483^(+0.0006) _(–0.0012) AU. The star has a large rotational vsin i of 10.5 ± 0.7 km s^(–1) and is relatively faint (V ≈ 13.89 mag); both properties are deleterious to precise Doppler measurements. The velocities are indeed noisy, with scatter of 30 m s^(–1), but exhibit a period and phase that are consistent with those implied by transit photometry. We securely detect the R-M effect, confirming the planets existence and establishing its orbit as prograde. We measure an inclination between the projected planetary orbital axis and the projected stellar rotation axis of λ = –26o.4 ± 10o.1, indicating a significant inclination of the planetary orbit. R-M measurements of a large sample of transiting planets from Kepler will provide a statistically robust measure of the true distribution of spin-orbit orientations for hot Jupiters around F and early G stars.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

THE KEPLER-19 SYSTEM: A TRANSITING 2.2 R ⊕ PLANET AND A SECOND PLANET DETECTED VIA TRANSIT TIMING VARIATIONS

Sarah Ballard; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Francois Fressin; David Charbonneau; J.-M. Desert; Guillermo Torres; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Christopher J. Burke; Howard Isaacson; Christopher E. Henze; Jason H. Steffen; David R. Ciardi; Steven B. Howell; William D. Cochran; Michael Endl; Stephen T. Bryson; Jason F. Rowe; Matthew J. Holman; Jack J. Lissauer; Jon M. Jenkins; Martin Still; Eric B. Ford; Jessie L. Christiansen; Christopher K. Middour; Michael R. Haas; Jie Li; Jennifer R. Hall; Sean McCauliff; Natalie M. Batalha; David G. Koch

We present the discovery of the Kepler-19 planetary system, which we first identified from a 9.3 day periodic transit signal in the Kepler photometry. From high-resolution spectroscopy of the star, we find a stellar effective temperature T_(eff) = 5541 ± 60 K, a metallicity [Fe/H] = –0.13 ± 0.06, and a surface gravity log(g) = 4.59 ± 0.10. We combine the estimate of T_(eff) and [Fe/H] with an estimate of the stellar density derived from the photometric light curve to deduce a stellar mass of M_*= 0.936 ± 0.040 M_☉ and a stellar radius of R_* = 0.850 ± 0.018 R_☉ (these errors do not include uncertainties in the stellar models). We rule out the possibility that the transits result from an astrophysical false positive by first identifying the subset of stellar blends that reproduce the precise shape of the light curve. Using the additional constraints from the measured color of the system, the absence of a secondary source in the high-resolution spectrum, and the absence of a secondary source in the adaptive optics imaging, we conclude that the planetary scenario is more than three orders of magnitude more likely than a blend. The blend scenario is independently disfavored by the achromaticity of the transit: we measure a transit depth with Spitzer at 4.5 μm of 547^(+113)_(–110) ppm, consistent with the depth measured in the Kepler optical bandpass of 567 ± 6 ppm (corrected for stellar limb darkening). We determine a physical radius of the planet Kepler-19b of R_p = 2.209 ± 0.048 R_⊕; the uncertainty is dominated by uncertainty in the stellar parameters. From radial velocity observations of the star, we find an upper limit on the planet mass of 20.3 M_⊕, corresponding to a maximum density of 10.4 g cm^(–3). We report a significant sinusoidal deviation of the transit times from a predicted linear ephemeris, which we conclude is due to an additional perturbing body in the system. We cannot uniquely determine the orbital parameters of the perturber, as various dynamical mechanisms match the amplitude, period, and shape of the transit timing signal and satisfy the host stars radial velocity limits. However, the perturber in these mechanisms has a period ≾ 160 days and mass ≾ 6 M_(Jup), confirming its planetary nature as Kepler-19c. We place limits on the presence of transits of Kepler-19c in the available Kepler data.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Transiting Planet Search in the Kepler Pipeline

Jon M. Jenkins; Hema Chandrasekaran; Sean McCauliff; Douglas A. Caldwell; Peter Tenenbaum; Jie Li; Todd C. Klaus; Miles T. Cote; Christopher K. Middour

The Kepler Mission simultaneously measures the brightness of more than 160,000 stars every 29.4 minutes over a 3.5-year mission to search for transiting planets. Detecting transits is a signal-detection problem where the signal of interest is a periodic pulse train and the predominant noise source is non-white, non-stationary (1/f) type process of stellar variability. Many stars also exhibit coherent or quasi-coherent oscillations. The detection algorithm first identifies and removes strong oscillations followed by an adaptive, wavelet-based matched filter. We discuss how we obtain super-resolution detection statistics and the effectiveness of the algorithm for Kepler flight data.

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Jon M. Jenkins

University of British Columbia

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Jie Li

Ames Research Center

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Todd C. Klaus

Search for extraterrestrial intelligence

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Elisa V. Quintana

Goddard Space Flight Center

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David G. Koch

NASA Exoplanet Science Institute

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