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Utilizing Kepler and K2 to Advance Exoplanet Demographics
Add to Calendar 2020-09-21T16:10:00 2020-09-21T17:30:00 UTC Utilizing Kepler and K2 to Advance Exoplanet Demographics
Start DateMon, Sep 21, 2020
12:10 PM
to
End DateMon, Sep 21, 2020
1:30 PM
Presented By
Jon Zink (UCLA)
Event Series: CEHW Seminar

Abstract:  Over the course of several years the Kepler mission, which continuously collected photometric data from a single patch of the sky, provided a uniform set of transiting exoplanet detections. This catalog remains the gold standard for transiting exoplanet occurrence rate studies. However, 18 additional fields of data, sampling a variety of Galactic latitudes, were collected following the malfunction that led to the end of the Kepler prime mission. Better known as the K2 mission, these fields provide a unique opportunity to understand how exoplanet occurrence is affected by Galactic latitude, stellar metallicity, and stellar age. With a fully automated pipeline now able to detect and vet transit signals in K2 data, we can measure the sample completeness and reliability. Correspondingly, I will present the first uniform analysis of small transiting exoplanet occurrence outside of the Kepler field. Additionally, with the full K2 sample now processed, I will discuss how we can incorporate this new catalog of planets into our current demographics analysis to expand our understanding of system architecture and planet formation mechanisms.

Host:  Eric Ford

Please click the link below to join the webinar: https://psu.zoom.us/j/96060188956