Kepler-47c

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Kepler-47c
Exoplanet List of exoplanets
300px
Artist's impressions of the Kepler-47 system (sizes to scale) compared to the planets of the inner Solar System with their respective habitable zones.
Parent star
Star Kepler-47 AB (KOI-3154)
Right ascension (α) 19h 41m 11.5s
Declination (δ) +46° 55′ 12″
Temperature (T) 5636(A)
unknown (B) K
Physical characteristics
Radius (r) 4.61 ± 0.20 Re[1] R
Orbital elements
Semi-major axis (a) 0.989 ± 0.016 AU[1] AU
Eccentricity (e) < 0.411[1]
Orbital period (P) 303.158 ± 0.072 days[1] d
Inclination (i) 89.826 ± 0.010° [1]°
Discovery information
Discovery date August 3, 2012[2]
Discoverer(s)
Discovery method Transit (Kepler Mission)
Other detection methods Transit timing variations,
Transit duration variations
Discovery status Confirmed
Other designations
KOI-3154 c

Kepler-47c is an extrasolar planet orbiting the circumbinary system Kepler-47 in the constellation Cygnus. The system, also involving another exoplanet, Kepler-47b, is about 4,900 light years away.[3] The binary system is the first to be found with more than one circumbinary planet.

Discovery

Kepler-47c, as well as Kepler-47b, was first discovered by scientists, from both NASA and the Tel-Aviv University in Israel, using the Kepler space telescope.[3][4] Additionally, the planetary characteristics of both planets were identified by a team of astronomers at the University of Texas at Austin's McDonald observatory.[3][5] Both planets were discovered after transiting their parent stars, and they both seem to be orbiting along the same plane.[4]

The two parent stars, Kepler-47A and Kepler-47B, orbit each other about every 7.45 days.[1] Kepler-47A is the larger and brighter of the two, being about the same size as the Sun and with about 84% of the sun's luminosity.[1] Kepler-47B, however, is only a little over 36% as large as the sun, and has only a little more than 1% of the sun's luminosity.[1]

Properties

Kepler-47c makes a complete orbit around its parent stars about every 303 days, and it lies within the system's habitable zone.[6] However, studies show it is most likely a gas giant planet, thus not being able to sustain life.[7] Hypothetically, though, any moons it may harbor could, with the right properties, support life.[6][7] Kepler-47c is slightly larger than the planet Neptune,[3] being about 4.6 times as large as Earth,[5] and could have a dense atmosphere of water vapor.[3]

Significance

Before the discovery of Kepler-47c, it was thought that binary stars with multiple planets could not exist. Gravitational issues caused by the parent stars would, it was believed, cause any circumbinary planets to either collide with each other, collide with one of the parent stars, or be flung out of orbit.[6] However, this discovery shows that multiple planets can form around binary stars, even in their habitable zones;[6] and while Kepler-47c is most likely unable to harbor life, other planets that could support life may orbit binary systems such as Kepler-47.[7]

See also

References

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