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Featured researches published by Elisa V. Quintana.


Nature | 2011

A closely packed system of low-mass, low-density planets transiting Kepler-11

Jack J. Lissauer; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Eric B. Ford; William J. Borucki; Francois Fressin; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Jerome A. Orosz; Jason F. Rowe; Guillermo Torres; William F. Welsh; Natalie M. Batalha; Stephen T. Bryson; Lars A. Buchhave; Douglas A. Caldwell; Joshua A. Carter; David Charbonneau; Jessie L. Christiansen; William D. Cochran; Jean-Michel Desert; Edward W. Dunham; Michael N. Fanelli; Jonathan J. Fortney; Thomas N. Gautier; John C. Geary; Ronald L. Gilliland; Michael R. Haas; Jennifer R. Hall; Matthew J. Holman; David G. Koch; David W. Latham

When an extrasolar planet passes in front of (transits) its star, its radius can be measured from the decrease in starlight and its orbital period from the time between transits. Multiple planets transiting the same star reveal much more: period ratios determine stability and dynamics, mutual gravitational interactions reflect planet masses and orbital shapes, and the fraction of transiting planets observed as multiples has implications for the planarity of planetary systems. But few stars have more than one known transiting planet, and none has more than three. Here we report Kepler spacecraft observations of a single Sun-like star, which we call Kepler-11, that reveal six transiting planets, five with orbital periods between 10 and 47u2009days and a sixth planet with a longer period. The five inner planets are among the smallest for which mass and size have both been measured, and these measurements imply substantial envelopes of light gases. The degree of coplanarity and proximity of the planetary orbits imply energy dissipation near the end of planet formation.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2018

Planetary Candidates Observed by Kepler. VIII. A Fully Automated Catalog with Measured Completeness and Reliability Based on Data Release 25

Susan E. Thompson; Jeffrey L. Coughlin; Kelsey Hoffman; Fergal Mullally; Jessie L. Christiansen; Christopher J. Burke; Steve Bryson; Natalie M. Batalha; Michael R. Haas; Joseph H. Catanzarite; Jason F. Rowe; Geert Barentsen; Douglas A. Caldwell; Bruce D. Clarke; Jon M. Jenkins; Jie Li; David W. Latham; Jack J. Lissauer; S. Mathur; Robert L. Morris; Shawn E. Seader; Jeffrey C. Smith; Todd C. Klaus; Joseph D. Twicken; Jeffrey Edward van Cleve; Bill Wohler; R. L. Akeson; David R. Ciardi; William D. Cochran; Christopher E. Henze

We present the Kepler Object of Interest (KOI) catalog of transiting exoplanets based on searching four years of Kepler time series photometry (Data Release 25, Q1-Q17). The catalog contains 8054 KOIs of which 4034 are planet candidates with periods between 0.25 and 632 days. Of these candidates, 219 are new in this catalog and include two new candidates in multi-planet systems (KOI-82.06 and KOI-2926.05), and ten new high-reliability, terrestrial-size, habitable zone candidates. This catalog was created using a tool called the Robovetter which automatically vets the DR25 Threshold Crossing Events (TCEs) found by the Kepler Pipeline (Twicken et al. 2016). Because of this automation, we were also able to vet simulated data sets and therefore measure how well the Robovetter separates those TCEs caused by noise from those caused by low signal-to-noise transits. Because of these measurements we fully expect that this catalog can be used to accurately calculate the frequency of planets out to Keplers detection limit, which includes temperate, super-Earth size planets around GK dwarf stars in our Galaxy. This paper discusses the Robovetter and the metrics it uses to decide which TCEs are called planet candidates in the DR25 KOI catalog. We also discuss the simulated transits, simulated systematic noise, and simulated astrophysical false positives created in order to characterize the properties of the final catalog. For orbital periods less than 100 d the Robovetter completeness (the fraction of simulated transits that are determined to be planet candidates) across all observed stars is greater than 85%. For the same period range, the catalog reliability (the fraction of candidates that are not due to instrumental or stellar noise) is greater than 98%. However, for low signal-to-noise candidates found between 200 and 500 days, our measurements indicate that the Robovetter is 73.5% complete and 37.2% reliable across all searched stars (or 76.7% complete and 50.5% reliable when considering just the FGK dwarf stars). We describe how the measured completeness and reliability varies with period, signal-to-noise, number of transits, and stellar type. Also, we discuss a value called the disposition score which provides an easy way to select a more reliable, albeit less complete, sample of candidates. The entire KOI catalog, the transit fits using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods, and all of the simulated data used to characterize this catalog are available at the NASA Exoplanet Archive.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

Implications of the interstellar object 1I/'Oumuamua for planetary dynamics and planetesimal formation

Sean N. Raymond; Philip J. Armitage; Dimitri Veras; Elisa V. Quintana; Thomas Barclay

Oumuamua, the first bona-fide interstellar planetesimal, was discovered passing through our Solar System on a hyperbolic orbit. This object was likely dynamically ejected from an extrasolar planetary system after a series of close encounters with gas giant planets. To account for Oumuamuas detection, simple arguments suggest that ~1 Earth-mass of planetesimals are ejected per Solar mass of Galactic stars. However, that value assumes mono-sized planetesimals. If the planetesimal mass distribution is instead top-heavy the inferred mass in interstellar planetesimals increases to an implausibly high value. The tension between theoretical expectations for the planetesimal mass function and the observation of Oumuamua can be relieved if a small fraction (~1%) of planetesimals are tidally disrupted on the pathway to ejection into Oumuamua-sized fragments. Using a large suite of simulations of giant planet dynamics including planetesimals, we confirm that roughly 1% of planetesimals pass within the tidal disruption radius of a gas giant on their pathway to ejection. Oumuamua may thus represent a surviving fragment of a disrupted planetesimal. Finally, we argue that an asteroidal composition is dynamically disfavoured for Oumuamua, as asteroidal planetesimals are both less abundant and ejected at a lower efficiency than cometary planetesimals.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

Plausible Compositions of the Seven TRAPPIST-1 Planets Using Long-term Dynamical Simulations

Billy Quarles; Elisa V. Quintana; Eric D. Lopez; Joshua E. Schlieder; Thomas Barclay

TRAPPIST-1 is a nearby ultra-cool dwarf that is host to a remarkable planetary system consisting of seven transiting planets. The orbital properties and radii of the planets have been well-constrained, and recently the masses of the inner six planets have been measured with additional ground and space-based photometric observations. Large uncertainties in these mass measurements have prevented a robust analysis of the planetary compositions. Here we perform many thousands of N-body dynamical simulations with planet properties perturbed from the observed values and identify those that are stable for millions of years. This allows us to identify self-consistent orbital solutions that can be used in future studies. From our range of dynamical masses, we find that most of the planets are consistent with an Earth-like composition, where TRAPPIST-1f is likely to have a volatile-rich envelope.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

The Demographics of Rocky Free-floating Planets and their Detectability by WFIRST

Thomas Barclay; Elisa V. Quintana; Sean N. Raymond; Matthew T. Penny

Planets are thought to form via accretion from a remnant disk of gas and solids around a newly formed star. During this process material in the disk either remains bound to the star as part of either a planet, a smaller celestial body, or makes up part of the interplanetary medium; falls into the star; or is ejected from the system. Herein we use dynamical models to probe the abundance and properties of ejected material during late-stage planet formation and estimate their contribution to the free-floating planet population. We present 300 N-body simulations of terrestrial planet formation around a solar-type star, with and without giant planets present, using a model that accounts for collisional fragmentation. In simulations with Jupiter and Saturn analogs, about one-third of the initial (~5 Mearth) disk mass is ejected, about half in planets more massive than Mercury but less than 0.3 Mearth, and the remainder in smaller bodies. Most ejections occur within 25 Myr, which is shorter than the timescale typically required for Earth-mass planets to grow (30-100 Myr). When giant planets are omitted from our simulations, almost no material is ejected within 200 Myr and only about 1% of the initial disk is ejected by 2 Gyr. We show that about 2.5 terrestrial-mass planets are ejected per star in the Galaxy. We predict that the space-borne microlensing search for free-floating planets from the Wide-Field Infra-Red Space Telescope (WFIRST) will discover up to 15 Mars-mass planets, but few free-floating Earth-mass planets.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2018

A Framework for Prioritizing the TESS Planetary Candidates Most Amenable to Atmospheric Characterization

Eliza Miller-Ricci Kempton; Jacob L. Bean; Dana R. Louie; Drake Deming; Daniel D. B. Koll; Megan Mansfield; Jessie L. Christiansen; Mercedes Lopez-Morales; Mark R. Swain; Robert T. Zellem; Sarah Ballard; Thomas Barclay; Joanna K. Barstow; Natasha E. Batalha; Thomas G. Beatty; Zach Berta-Thompson; Jayne Birkby; Lars A. Buchhave; David Charbonneau; Nicolas B. Cowan; Ian J. M. Crossfield; Miguel de Val-Borro; René Doyon; Diana Dragomir; Eric Gaidos; Kevin Heng; Renyu Hu; Stephen R. Kane; Laura Kreidberg; Matthias Mallonn

A key legacy of the recently launched the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission will be to provide the astronomical community with many of the best transiting exoplanet targets for atmospheric characterization. However, time is of the essence to take full advantage of this opportunity. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), although delayed, will still complete its nominal five year mission on a timeline that motivates rapid identification, confirmation, and mass measurement of the top atmospheric characterization targets from TESS. Beyond JWST, future dedicated missions for atmospheric studies such as the Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey (ARIEL) require the discovery and confirmation of several hundred additional sub-Jovian size planets (R p < 10 R ⊕) orbiting bright stars, beyond those known today, to ensure a successful statistical census of exoplanet atmospheres. Ground-based extremely large telescopes (ELTs) will also contribute to surveying the atmospheres of the transiting planets discovered by TESS. Here we present a set of two straightforward analytic metrics, quantifying the expected signal-to-noise in transmission and thermal emission spectroscopy for a given planet, that will allow the top atmospheric characterization targets to be readily identified among the TESS planet candidates. Targets that meet our proposed threshold values for these metrics would be encouraged for rapid follow-up and confirmation via radial velocity mass measurements. Based on the catalog of simulated TESS detections by Sullivan et al., we determine appropriate cutoff values of the metrics, such that the TESS mission will ultimately yield a sample of ~300 high-quality atmospheric characterization targets across a range of planet size bins, extending down to Earth-size, potentially habitable worlds.


The Astronomical Journal | 2017

Validation of Small Kepler Transiting Planet Candidates in or near the Habitable Zone

Guillermo Torres; Stephen R. Kane; Jason F. Rowe; Natalie M. Batalha; Christopher E. Henze; David R. Ciardi; Thomas Barclay; William J. Borucki; Lars A. Buchhave; Justin R. Crepp; Mark E. Everett; Elliott P. Horch; Andrew W. Howard; Steve B. Howell; Howard Isaacson; Jon M. Jenkins; David W. Latham; Erik A. Petigura; Elisa V. Quintana

A main goal of NASAs Kepler Mission is to establish the frequency of potentially habitable Earth-size planets (eta Earth). Relatively few such candidates identified by the mission can be confirmed to be rocky via dynamical measurement of their mass. Here we report an effort to validate 18 of them statistically using the BLENDER technique, by showing that the likelihood they are true planets is far greater than that of a false positive. Our analysis incorporates follow-up observations including high-resolution optical and near-infrared spectroscopy, high-resolution imaging, and information from the analysis of the flux centroids of the Kepler observations themselves. While many of these candidates have been previously validated by others, the confidence levels reported typically ignore the possibility that the planet may transit a different star than the target along the same line of sight. If that were the case, a planet that appears small enough to be rocky may actually be considerably larger and therefore less interesting from the point of view of habitability. We take this into consideration here, and are able to validate 15 of our candidates at a 99.73% (3 sigma) significance level or higher, and the other three at slightly lower confidence. We characterize the GKM host stars using available ground-based observations and provide updated parameters for the planets, with sizes between 0.8 and 2.9 Earth radii. Seven of them (KOI-0438.02, 0463.01, 2418.01, 2626.01, 3282.01, 4036.01, and 5856.01) have a better than 50% chance of being smaller than 2 Earth radii and being in the habitable zone of their host stars.


arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2012

Accurate parameters of 93 solar-type Kepler targets

H. Bruntt; Sarbani Basu; B. Smalley; W. J. Chaplin; G. A. Verner; Timothy R. Bedding; C. Catala; J. C. Gazzano; J. Molenda-Zakowicz; A. O. Thygesen; K. Uytterhoeven; S. Hekker; D. Huber; C. Karoff; S. Mathur; B. Mosser; T. Appourchaux; T. L. Campante; Yvonne P. Elsworth; R. A. Garcia; R. Handberg; T. S. Metcalfe; P.-O. Quirion; C. Regulo; I. W. Roxburgh; D. Stello; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; S. D. Kawaler; Hans Kjeldsen; R. L. Morris


arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2012

Seismic analysis of four solar-like stars observed during more than eight months by Kepler

S. Mathur; T. L. Campante; R. Handberg; R. A. Garcia; T. Appourchaux; Timothy R. Bedding; B. Mosser; W. J. Chaplin; J. Ballot; O. Benomar; Alfio Bonanno; E. Corsaro; P. Gaulme; S. Hekker; C. Regulo; D. Salabert; G. A. Verner; T. R. White; I. M. Brandão; O. Creevey; G. Doğan; M. Bazot; Cunha; Yvonne P. Elsworth; D. Huber; S. J. Hale; G. Houdek; C. Karoff; M. Lundkvist; T. S. Metcalfe


Archive | 2003

Terrestrial Planet Formation Around Close Binary Stars

Jack J. Lissauer; Elisa V. Quintana

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Thomas Barclay

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Jessie L. Christiansen

California Institute of Technology

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Jon M. Jenkins

University of British Columbia

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David G. Koch

NASA Exoplanet Science Institute

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