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Kepler-90

Kepler-90, also designated 2MASS J18574403+4918185, is a F-type star located about 2,790 light-years (855 pc) from Earth in the constellation of Draco. It is notable for possessing a planetary system that has the same number of observed planets as the Solar System.

Kepler-90

Comparison of the Kepler-90 exoplanetary system with that of the Solar System (14 December 2017).
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Draco
Right ascension 18h 57m 44.03831s[1]
Declination +49° 18′ 18.4965″[1]
Apparent magnitude (V) 13.9[2]
Characteristics
Spectral type F9 IV/V[3]
Astrometry
Radial velocity (Rv)−15.54±2.91[1] km/s
Proper motion (μ) RA: −4.350(12) mas/yr[1]
Dec.: −3.256(14) mas/yr[1]
Parallax (π)1.1695 ± 0.0112 mas[1]
Distance2,790 ± 30 ly
(855 ± 8 pc)
Details
Mass1.2±0.1[4] M
Radius1.2±0.1[4] R
Luminosity1.7[1] L
Surface gravity (log g)4.4[4] cgs
Temperature6,080+260
−170
[4] K
Metallicity [Fe/H]−0.12±0.18[4] dex
Rotational velocity (v sin i)4.6±2.1[4] km/s
Other designations
2MASS J18574403+4918185, KIC 11442793, KOI-351, Gaia DR2 2132193431285570304[5]
Database references
SIMBADdata
KICdata

Nomenclature and history edit

Prior to Kepler observation, Kepler-90 had the 2MASS catalogue number 2MASS J18574403+4918185. It has the designation of KIC 11442793 in the Kepler Input Catalog, and was given the Kepler object of interest number of KOI-351 when it was found to have a transiting planet candidate.[5]

The star's planetary system was discovered by NASA's Kepler Mission, a mission tasked with discovering planets in transit around their stars.[4] The transit method that Kepler uses involves detecting dips in brightness in stars. These dips in brightness can be interpreted as planets whose orbits move in front of their stars from the perspective of Earth. The name Kepler-90 derives directly from the fact that the star is the catalogued 90th star discovered by Kepler to have confirmed planets.[6]

The whole star and planet system is designated by just "Kepler-90", without a postfix, with Kepler-90A specifically referring only to the star, if needed for clarity. The first planet discovered is Kepler-90b, with subsequently discovered planets given subsequent lowercase letters in order of discovery, up to Kepler-90i, for the last planet found to date.[7][a]

Stellar characteristics edit

Kepler-90 is likely a F-type star that is approximately 120% the mass and radius of the Sun. It has a surface temperature of around 6,100 K.[4] In comparison, the Sun has a surface temperature of 5,772 K.[8]

The star's apparent magnitude, or how bright it appears from Earth's perspective, is 14.[2][9] It is too dim to be seen with the naked eye, which typically can only see objects with a magnitude around 6.[10]

Planetary system edit

Kepler-90 is notable for similarity of the configuration of its planetary system to that of the Solar System, in which rocky planets are nearer the star and gas giants farther away. The six inner planets range from super-Earths to mini-Neptunes in size. The two outermost planets are gas giants. The most distant known planet orbits its host star at about the same distance as Earth from the Sun.

Kepler-90 was used to test the "validation by multiplicity" confirmation method for Kepler planets. Six inner planets met all the requirements for confirmation. The penultimate planet showed transit-timing variations, indicating that it is a real planet as well.[11]

On 14 December 2017, NASA and Google announced the discovery of an eighth exoplanet, Kepler-90i, in the Kepler-90 system. The discovery was made using a new machine learning method developed by Google.[12][13]

The Kepler-90 system is one of only two eight-planet candidate systems from Kepler, together with Kepler-385, and the second to be discovered after the Solar System. It was also the only seven-planet candidate system from Kepler before the eighth was discovered in 2017. All of the eight known planet candidates orbit within about 1 AU of Kepler-90. A Hill stability test and an orbital integration of the system show that it is stable.[14]

The five innermost exoplanets, Kepler-90b, c, i, d, and e may be tidally locked, meaning that one side of the exoplanets permanently faces the star in eternal daylight and the other side permanently faces away in eternal darkness.

A 2020 analysis of transit-timing variations of the two outermost planets, Kepler-90g and h, found best-fit masses of 15+0.9
−0.8
 M🜨
and 203±M🜨, respectively. Given a transit-derived radius of 8.13 R🜨, Kepler-90g was found to have an extremely low density of 0.15±0.05 g/cm3, unusually inflated for its mass and insolation. Several possible explanations for its apparently low density include a puffy planet with a dusty atmosphere or a smaller planet surrounded by a tilted wide ring system (albeit the latter option is less likely due to the lack of evidence for rings in transit data).[15]

The Kepler-90 planetary system[16][17][12][15]
Companion
(in order from star)
Mass Semimajor axis
(AU)
Orbital period
(days)
Eccentricity Inclination Radius
b 0.074 ± 0.016 7.008151 89.4° 1.31 R🜨
c 0.089 ± 0.012 8.719375 89.68° 1.18 R🜨
i 0.107 ± 0.03 14.44912 89.2° 1.32 R🜨
d 0.32 ± 0.05 59.73667 89.71° 2.88 R🜨
e 0.42 ± 0.06 91.93913 89.79° 2.67 R🜨
f 0.48 ± 0.09 124.9144 0.01 89.77° 2.89 R🜨
g 15+0.9
−0.8
 M🜨
0.71 ± 0.08 210.60697 0.049+0.011
−0.017
89.92+0.03
−0.01
°
8.13 R🜨
h 203 ± 5 M🜨 1.01 ± 0.11 331.60059 0.011+0.002
−0.003
89.927+0.011
−0.007
°
11.32 R🜨

Near resonances edit

 
Artist's impression of the planets of the Kepler-90 exoplanetary system compared to the eight planets of the Solar System

Kepler-90's eight known planets all have periods that are close to being in integer ratio relationships with other planets' periods; that is, they are close to being in orbital resonance. The period ratios b:c, c:i and i:d are close to 4:5, 3:5, and 1:4, respectively (4: 4.977, 3: 4.97, and 1: 4.13) and d, e, f, g, and h are close to a 2:3:4:7:11 period ratio (2: 3.078: 4.182: 7.051: 11.102; also 7: 11.021).[11][12] f, g, and h are also close to a 3:5:8 period ratio (3: 5.058: 7.964).[4]

Relevant to systems like this and that of Kepler-36, calculations suggest that the presence of an outer gas giant planet (as exemplified by g and h in this system) facilitates the formation of closely packed resonances among inner super-Earths.[18] The semimajor axis of any additional nontransiting outer gas giant must be larger than 30 AU to keep from perturbing the observed planetary system out of the transiting plane.[19]

See also edit

  • TRAPPIST-1, star with seven known exoplanets
  • HD 10180, star with at least six known exoplanets, and three exoplanet candidates
  • Kepler-385, star with at least three known exoplanets, and five more candidates
  • HD 219134, star with six exoplanets
  • 55 Cancri, star with multiple planets
  • Tau Ceti, star with at least four exoplanets and four more candidates

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Designations with postfix letters b, c, d, e, f, g, h, and i follow the order of discovery; postfix letter A (Kepler-90A) is used for the host star (or often no suffix at all, Kepler-90, which also refers to the entire system of star and planets as a whole). The letter b specifies the first planet discovered orbiting a given star, followed by the other lowercase letters of the alphabet.[7] In the case of the Kepler-90 star system, there have been eight planets discovered orbiting the star Kepler-90A, so far, so letters up to i are used to distinguish them, with Kepler-90i being the last planet discovered thus far.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Vallenari, A.; et al. (Gaia collaboration) (2023). "Gaia Data Release 3. Summary of the content and survey properties". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 674: A1. arXiv:2208.00211. Bibcode:2023A&A...674A...1G. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/202243940. S2CID 244398875. Gaia DR3 record for this source at VizieR.
  2. ^ a b Zacharias, N.; Finch, C. T.; Girard, T. M.; Henden, A.; Bartlett, J. L.; Monet, D. G.; Zacharias, M. I. (2012). "VizieR Online Data Catalog: UCAC4 Catalogue (Zacharias+, 2012)". VizieR On-line Data Catalog: I/322A. Originally Published in: 2012yCat.1322....0Z; 2013AJ....145...44Z. 1322. Bibcode:2012yCat.1322....0Z.
  3. ^ Gray, R. O.; Corbally, C. J.; De Cat, P.; Fu, J. N.; Ren, A. B.; Shi, J. R.; Luo, A. L.; Zhang, H. T.; Wu, Y.; Cao, Z.; Li, G.; Zhang, Y.; Hou, Y.; Wang, Y. (2016). "LAMOST Observations in the Kepler Field: Spectral Classification with the MKCLASS Code". The Astronomical Journal. 151 (1): 13. Bibcode:2016AJ....151...13G. doi:10.3847/0004-6256/151/1/13. S2CID 126346435.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Cabrera, J.; Csizmadia, Sz.; Lehmann, H.; Dvorak, R.; Gandolfi, D.; Rauer, H.; et al. (31 December 2013). "The planetary system to KIC 11442793: A compact analogue to the Solar System". The Astrophysical Journal. 781 (1): 18. arXiv:1310.6248. Bibcode:2014ApJ...781...18C. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/781/1/18. S2CID 118875825.
  5. ^ a b "Kepler-90". SIMBAD. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg.
  6. ^ "Kepler numbers". NASA Exoplanet Archive. Pasadena, CA: California Institute of Technology. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  7. ^ a b Hessman, F.V.; Dhillon, V.S.; Winget, D.E.; Schreiber, M.R.; Horne, K.; Marsh, T.R.; et al. (2010). "On the naming convention used for multiple star systems and extrasolar planets". arXiv:1012.0707 [astro-ph.SR].
  8. ^ Williams, D.R. (1 July 2013). "Sun Fact Sheet". NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 12 August 2013.
  9. ^ "Planet Kepler-90 b". Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  10. ^ Sinnott, Roger W. (19 July 2006). "What's my naked-eye magnitude limit?". Sky and Telescope. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
  11. ^ a b Lissauer, Jack J.; Marcy, Geoffrey W.; Bryson, Stephen T.; Rowe, Jason F.; Jontof-Hutter, Daniel; Agol, Eric; Borucki, William J.; Carter, Joshua A.; Ford, Eric B.; Gilliland, Ronald L.; Kolbl, Rea; Star, Kimberly M.; Steffen, Jason H.; Torres, Guillermo (25 February 2014). "Validation of Kepler's multiple planet candidates. II: Refined statistical framework and descriptions of systems of special interest". The Astrophysical Journal. 784 (1): 44. arXiv:1402.6352. Bibcode:2014ApJ...784...44L. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/784/1/44. S2CID 119108651.
  12. ^ a b c Shallue, Christopher J.; Vanderburg, Andrew (16 December 2017). "Identifying exoplanets with deep learning: A five planet resonant chain around Kepler-80 and an eighth planet around Kepler-90" (PDF). Retrieved 14 December 2017 – via Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
  13. ^ Chou, Felicia; Hawkes, Alison; Landau, Elizabeth (14 December 2017). "Artificial intelligence, NASA data, used to discover eighth planet circling distant star" (Press release). JPL / NASA. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  14. ^ Schmitt, J.R.; Wang, J.; Fischer, D.A.; Jek, K.J.; Moriarty, J.C.; Boyajian, T.S.; et al. (26 June 2014). "Planet hunters. VI. An independent characterization of KOI-351 and several long period planet candidates from the Kepler archival data". The Astronomical Journal. 148 (28): 28. arXiv:1310.5912. Bibcode:2014AJ....148...28S. doi:10.1088/0004-6256/148/2/28. S2CID 119238163.
  15. ^ a b Liang, Yan; Robnik, Jakob; Seljak, Uros (2021). "Kepler-90: Giant transit-timing variations reveal a super-puff". The Astronomical Journal. 161 (4): 202. arXiv:2011.08515. Bibcode:2021AJ....161..202L. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/abe6a7. S2CID 226975548.
  16. ^ "Kepler-90". Open Exoplanet Catalog. MIT. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  17. ^ "New Worlds Atlas". Exoplanets.nasa.gov. NASA. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  18. ^ Hands, T.O.; Alexander, R.D. (13 January 2016). "There might be giants: Unseen Jupiter-mass planets as sculptors of tightly packed planetary systems". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 456 (4): 4121–4127. arXiv:1512.02649. Bibcode:2016MNRAS.456.4121H. doi:10.1093/mnras/stv2897. S2CID 55175754.
  19. ^ Becker, Juliette C.; Adams, Fred C. (2017). "Effects of unseen additional planetary perturbers on compact extrasolar planetary systems". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 468 (1): 549–563. arXiv:1702.07714. Bibcode:2017MNRAS.468..549B. doi:10.1093/mnras/stx461. S2CID 119325005.

External links edit

  • NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day: The Kepler 90 Planetary System (December 18, 2017)

kepler, also, designated, 2mass, j18574403, 4918185, type, star, located, about, light, years, from, earth, constellation, draco, notable, possessing, planetary, system, that, same, number, observed, planets, solar, system, comparison, exoplanetary, system, wi. Kepler 90 also designated 2MASS J18574403 4918185 is a F type star located about 2 790 light years 855 pc from Earth in the constellation of Draco It is notable for possessing a planetary system that has the same number of observed planets as the Solar System Kepler 90Comparison of the Kepler 90 exoplanetary system with that of the Solar System 14 December 2017 Observation dataEpoch J2000 Equinox J2000Constellation DracoRight ascension 18h 57m 44 03831s 1 Declination 49 18 18 4965 1 Apparent magnitude V 13 9 2 CharacteristicsSpectral type F9 IV V 3 AstrometryRadial velocity Rv 15 54 2 91 1 km sProper motion m RA 4 350 12 mas yr 1 Dec 3 256 14 mas yr 1 Parallax p 1 1695 0 0112 mas 1 Distance2 790 30 ly 855 8 pc DetailsMass1 2 0 1 4 M Radius1 2 0 1 4 R Luminosity1 7 1 L Surface gravity log g 4 4 4 cgsTemperature6 080 260 170 4 KMetallicity Fe H 0 12 0 18 4 dexRotational velocity v sin i 4 6 2 1 4 km sOther designations2MASS J18574403 4918185 KIC 11442793 KOI 351 Gaia DR2 2132193431285570304 5 Database referencesSIMBADdataKICdata Contents 1 Nomenclature and history 2 Stellar characteristics 3 Planetary system 3 1 Near resonances 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 External linksNomenclature and history editPrior to Kepler observation Kepler 90 had the 2MASS catalogue number 2MASS J18574403 4918185 It has the designation of KIC 11442793 in the Kepler Input Catalog and was given the Kepler object of interest number of KOI 351 when it was found to have a transiting planet candidate 5 The star s planetary system was discovered by NASA s Kepler Mission a mission tasked with discovering planets in transit around their stars 4 The transit method that Kepler uses involves detecting dips in brightness in stars These dips in brightness can be interpreted as planets whose orbits move in front of their stars from the perspective of Earth The name Kepler 90 derives directly from the fact that the star is the catalogued 90th star discovered by Kepler to have confirmed planets 6 The whole star and planet system is designated by just Kepler 90 without a postfix with Kepler 90A specifically referring only to the star if needed for clarity The first planet discovered is Kepler 90b with subsequently discovered planets given subsequent lowercase letters in order of discovery up to Kepler 90i for the last planet found to date 7 a Stellar characteristics editKepler 90 is likely a F type star that is approximately 120 the mass and radius of the Sun It has a surface temperature of around 6 100 K 4 In comparison the Sun has a surface temperature of 5 772 K 8 The star s apparent magnitude or how bright it appears from Earth s perspective is 14 2 9 It is too dim to be seen with the naked eye which typically can only see objects with a magnitude around 6 10 Planetary system editKepler 90 is notable for similarity of the configuration of its planetary system to that of the Solar System in which rocky planets are nearer the star and gas giants farther away The six inner planets range from super Earths to mini Neptunes in size The two outermost planets are gas giants The most distant known planet orbits its host star at about the same distance as Earth from the Sun Kepler 90 was used to test the validation by multiplicity confirmation method for Kepler planets Six inner planets met all the requirements for confirmation The penultimate planet showed transit timing variations indicating that it is a real planet as well 11 On 14 December 2017 NASA and Google announced the discovery of an eighth exoplanet Kepler 90i in the Kepler 90 system The discovery was made using a new machine learning method developed by Google 12 13 The Kepler 90 system is one of only two eight planet candidate systems from Kepler together with Kepler 385 and the second to be discovered after the Solar System It was also the only seven planet candidate system from Kepler before the eighth was discovered in 2017 All of the eight known planet candidates orbit within about 1 AU of Kepler 90 A Hill stability test and an orbital integration of the system show that it is stable 14 The five innermost exoplanets Kepler 90b c i d and e may be tidally locked meaning that one side of the exoplanets permanently faces the star in eternal daylight and the other side permanently faces away in eternal darkness A 2020 analysis of transit timing variations of the two outermost planets Kepler 90g and h found best fit masses of 15 0 9 0 8 M and 203 5 M respectively Given a transit derived radius of 8 13 R Kepler 90g was found to have an extremely low density of 0 15 0 05 g cm3 unusually inflated for its mass and insolation Several possible explanations for its apparently low density include a puffy planet with a dusty atmosphere or a smaller planet surrounded by a tilted wide ring system albeit the latter option is less likely due to the lack of evidence for rings in transit data 15 The Kepler 90 planetary system 16 17 12 15 Companion in order from star Mass Semimajor axis AU Orbital period days Eccentricity Inclination Radiusb 0 074 0 016 7 008151 89 4 1 31 R c 0 089 0 012 8 719375 89 68 1 18 R i 0 107 0 03 14 44912 89 2 1 32 R d 0 32 0 05 59 73667 89 71 2 88 R e 0 42 0 06 91 93913 89 79 2 67 R f 0 48 0 09 124 9144 0 01 89 77 2 89 R g 15 0 9 0 8 M 0 71 0 08 210 60697 0 049 0 011 0 017 89 92 0 03 0 01 8 13 R h 203 5 M 1 01 0 11 331 60059 0 011 0 002 0 003 89 927 0 011 0 007 11 32 R Near resonances edit nbsp Artist s impression of the planets of the Kepler 90 exoplanetary system compared to the eight planets of the Solar SystemKepler 90 s eight known planets all have periods that are close to being in integer ratio relationships with other planets periods that is they are close to being in orbital resonance The period ratios b c c i and i d are close to 4 5 3 5 and 1 4 respectively 4 4 977 3 4 97 and 1 4 13 and d e f g and h are close to a 2 3 4 7 11 period ratio 2 3 078 4 182 7 051 11 102 also 7 11 021 11 12 f g and h are also close to a 3 5 8 period ratio 3 5 058 7 964 4 Relevant to systems like this and that of Kepler 36 calculations suggest that the presence of an outer gas giant planet as exemplified by g and h in this system facilitates the formation of closely packed resonances among inner super Earths 18 The semimajor axis of any additional nontransiting outer gas giant must be larger than 30 AU to keep from perturbing the observed planetary system out of the transiting plane 19 See also editTRAPPIST 1 star with seven known exoplanets HD 10180 star with at least six known exoplanets and three exoplanet candidates Kepler 385 star with at least three known exoplanets and five more candidates HD 219134 star with six exoplanets 55 Cancri star with multiple planets Tau Ceti star with at least four exoplanets and four more candidatesFootnotes edit Designations with postfix letters b c d e f g h and i follow the order of discovery postfix letter A Kepler 90A is used for the host star or often no suffix at all Kepler 90 which also refers to the entire system of star and planets as a whole The letter b specifies the first planet discovered orbiting a given star followed by the other lowercase letters of the alphabet 7 In the case of the Kepler 90 star system there have been eight planets discovered orbiting the star Kepler 90A so far so letters up to i are used to distinguish them with Kepler 90i being the last planet discovered thus far References edit a b c d e f Vallenari A et al Gaia collaboration 2023 Gaia Data Release 3 Summary of the content and survey properties Astronomy and Astrophysics 674 A1 arXiv 2208 00211 Bibcode 2023A amp A 674A 1G doi 10 1051 0004 6361 202243940 S2CID 244398875 Gaia DR3 record for this source at VizieR a b Zacharias N Finch C T Girard T M Henden A Bartlett J L Monet D G Zacharias M I 2012 VizieR Online Data Catalog UCAC4 Catalogue Zacharias 2012 VizieR On line Data Catalog I 322A Originally Published in 2012yCat 1322 0Z 2013AJ 145 44Z 1322 Bibcode 2012yCat 1322 0Z Gray R O Corbally C J De Cat P Fu J N Ren A B Shi J R Luo A L Zhang H T Wu Y Cao Z Li G Zhang Y Hou Y Wang Y 2016 LAMOST Observations in the Kepler Field Spectral Classification with the MKCLASS Code The Astronomical Journal 151 1 13 Bibcode 2016AJ 151 13G doi 10 3847 0004 6256 151 1 13 S2CID 126346435 a b c d e f g h i Cabrera J Csizmadia Sz Lehmann H Dvorak R Gandolfi D Rauer H et al 31 December 2013 The planetary system to KIC 11442793 A compact analogue to the Solar System The Astrophysical Journal 781 1 18 arXiv 1310 6248 Bibcode 2014ApJ 781 18C doi 10 1088 0004 637X 781 1 18 S2CID 118875825 a b Kepler 90 SIMBAD Centre de donnees astronomiques de Strasbourg Kepler numbers NASA Exoplanet Archive Pasadena CA California Institute of Technology Retrieved 9 January 2021 a b Hessman F V Dhillon V S Winget D E Schreiber M R Horne K Marsh T R et al 2010 On the naming convention used for multiple star systems and extrasolar planets arXiv 1012 0707 astro ph SR Williams D R 1 July 2013 Sun Fact Sheet NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on 15 July 2010 Retrieved 12 August 2013 Planet Kepler 90 b Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia Retrieved 26 April 2018 Sinnott Roger W 19 July 2006 What s my naked eye magnitude limit Sky and Telescope Retrieved 17 April 2019 a b Lissauer Jack J Marcy Geoffrey W Bryson Stephen T Rowe Jason F Jontof Hutter Daniel Agol Eric Borucki William J Carter Joshua A Ford Eric B Gilliland Ronald L Kolbl Rea Star Kimberly M Steffen Jason H Torres Guillermo 25 February 2014 Validation of Kepler s multiple planet candidates II Refined statistical framework and descriptions of systems of special interest The Astrophysical Journal 784 1 44 arXiv 1402 6352 Bibcode 2014ApJ 784 44L doi 10 1088 0004 637X 784 1 44 S2CID 119108651 a b c Shallue Christopher J Vanderburg Andrew 16 December 2017 Identifying exoplanets with deep learning A five planet resonant chain around Kepler 80 and an eighth planet around Kepler 90 PDF Retrieved 14 December 2017 via Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Chou Felicia Hawkes Alison Landau Elizabeth 14 December 2017 Artificial intelligence NASA data used to discover eighth planet circling distant star Press release JPL NASA Retrieved 15 December 2017 Schmitt J R Wang J Fischer D A Jek K J Moriarty J C Boyajian T S et al 26 June 2014 Planet hunters VI An independent characterization of KOI 351 and several long period planet candidates from the Kepler archival data The Astronomical Journal 148 28 28 arXiv 1310 5912 Bibcode 2014AJ 148 28S doi 10 1088 0004 6256 148 2 28 S2CID 119238163 a b Liang Yan Robnik Jakob Seljak Uros 2021 Kepler 90 Giant transit timing variations reveal a super puff The Astronomical Journal 161 4 202 arXiv 2011 08515 Bibcode 2021AJ 161 202L doi 10 3847 1538 3881 abe6a7 S2CID 226975548 Kepler 90 Open Exoplanet Catalog MIT Retrieved 11 May 2018 New Worlds Atlas Exoplanets nasa gov NASA Retrieved 11 May 2018 Hands T O Alexander R D 13 January 2016 There might be giants Unseen Jupiter mass planets as sculptors of tightly packed planetary systems Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 456 4 4121 4127 arXiv 1512 02649 Bibcode 2016MNRAS 456 4121H doi 10 1093 mnras stv2897 S2CID 55175754 Becker Juliette C Adams Fred C 2017 Effects of unseen additional planetary perturbers on compact extrasolar planetary systems Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 468 1 549 563 arXiv 1702 07714 Bibcode 2017MNRAS 468 549B doi 10 1093 mnras stx461 S2CID 119325005 External links editNASA Astronomy Picture of the Day The Kepler 90 Planetary System December 18 2017 Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kepler 90 amp oldid 1214524208, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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