TEPCat: Kepler-65d


 

This page summarises the information held within TEPCat for the transiting planetary system Kepler-65d. Please see here for descriptions of the quantities given below.

 

Discovery and basic observable quantities:
 
Quantity Value Unit
Reference of discovery paper 2013ApJ...766..101C  
Date of discovery paper 2013 / 2 / 16 y / m / d
Data/telescope used for discovery Kepler  
Right ascension 19 14 45.29 h m s
Declination +41 09 04.3 d m s
Right ascension (decimal) 288.68871 degrees
Declination (decimal) 41.15119 degrees
V-band apparent magnitude 11.10 mag
K-band apparent magnitude 9.81 mag
Transit duration 0.171
( 4.10 )
day
hour
Transit depth 0.011 %
Time of mid-transit   2455702.80285 ± 0.00040     HJD or BJD
Orbital period 8.13167 ± 0.00023 days
Reference for orbital ephemeris   2019AJ....157..145M  

 

Physical properties from the most recent detailed study:
 
Quantity Value Unit
Stellar effective temperature 6211 ± 66 K
Stellar metal abundance ([Fe/H] or [M/H])   +0.17 ± 0.06 dex
Stellar mass 1.248 +0.018 −0.021   Msun
Stellar radius 1.437 +0.032 −0.027 Rsun
Stellar logarithmic surface gravity 4.232 ± 0.006 c.g.s.
Stellar mean density 0.440 ± 0.008
( 0.621 ± 0.011 )
ρsun
g cm-3
Orbital eccentricity 0.014 +0.016 −0.010  
Orbital semimajor axis   0.084 +0.006 −0.002  AU
Planetary mass 0.013 ± 0.003
( 4.13 ± 0.95 )
Mjup
Mearth
Planetary radius 0.136 ± 0.004
( 1.524 ± 0.045 )
Rjup
Rearth
Planetary surface gravity m/s2
log(cgs)
Planetary mean density 4.3 ± 0.9
( 5.7 ± 1.2 )
ρjup
g cm-3
Planetary equilibrium temperature K
Reference of detailed study 2019AJ....157..145M  

 

Entries in the catalogue of orbital obliquity measurements:
 
Reference λ (degrees)
Chaplin et al. (2013)aligned

 

 


Page generated on 2025/03/24           John Southworth   (Keele University, UK)