Kepler-89e

Kepler-89e, also known as KOI-94e, is an exoplanet in the constellation of Cygnus. It orbits Kepler-89.

Kepler-89e
Discovery
Discovered byLauren M. Weiss et al.[1]
Discovery date9 March 2013
Transit method
Orbital characteristics
0.3046 ± 0.0040 AU (45,570,000 ± 600,000 km)[1]
Eccentricity0.019 ± 0.23[1]
54.32031 ± 0.00012[1] d
Inclination89.76 ± 0.15[1]
Semi-amplitude4.5+2.3
−3.5
[1]
StarKepler-89
Physical characteristics
Mean radius
6.56 ± 0.62[1] R
Mass35+18
−28
[1] M
Mean density
0.60+0.26
−0.56
g cm−3
Temperature584[1]

    Physical properties

    It is a type III planet, making it cloudless and blue, making it look like a larger version of Uranus and Neptune. It has a mass around 35 times that of Earth.[1] It has a similar density to Saturn, 0.60 g/cm3,[1] giving it a radius 6.56 times that of the Earth.[1] It orbits an F-type main-sequence star at a distance of 0.305 astronomical units (au), with a period of 54.32031 days,[1] making its orbit smaller than that of Mercury's. It has a very low eccentricity of 0.019.[1] It has a temperature of 584 K.[1]

    Kepler-89e orbits the star Kepler-89. Kepler-89 has a mass of 1.18 solar masses,[2] and a radius of 1.32 solar radii.[2] It is 3.3 billion years old, younger than the Sun,[2] making its planets about 3,000,000,000 years old (3 Gyr). It has a temperature of 6,210 K,[2] making it appear bright yellowish-white.

    gollark: While the magic of metatables and random fiddling does allow you to *mostly* make tables zero-indexed, table literals will still be stupid and 1-indexed.
    gollark: That's quite a popular opinion really.
    gollark: Remotely turning on a computer with another computer beside it isn't that useful because that one might turn off too.
    gollark: Yes.
    gollark: For example, `do_something(4, 44)` would print `48`, as inside the function arg1 has the value `4` and arg2 has the value `44`.

    References

    1. Weiss, Lauren M; et al. (2013). "The Mass of KOI-94d and a Relation for Planet Radius, Mass, and Incident Flux". The Astrophysical Journal. 768: 14. arXiv:1303.2150. Bibcode:2013ApJ...768...14W. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/768/1/14.
    2. Morton, Timothy D.; et al. (2016). "False Positive Probabilities for Allkeplerobjects of Interest: 1284 Newly Validated Planets and 428 Likely False Positives". The Astrophysical Journal. 822 (2): 86. arXiv:1605.02825. Bibcode:2016ApJ...822...86M. doi:10.3847/0004-637X/822/2/86.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.