Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The NASA Exoplanet Archive: Data and Tools for Exoplanet Research

2013; Institute of Physics; Volume: 125; Issue: 930 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1086/672273

ISSN

1538-3873

Autores

Rachel Akeson, X. Chen, David R. Ciardi, Megan Crane, John Good, M. Harbut, E. S. Jackson, Stephen R. Kane, A. C. Laity, Stephanie Leifer, Mary R. Lynn, D. L. McElroy, M. Papin, Peter Plavchan, Solange Ramírez, Raquel Oreiro Rey, Kaspar von Braun, M. Wittman, M. Abajian, B. Ali, Charles Beichman, A. Beekley, G. Bruce Berriman, S. J. Berukoff, G. Bryden, B. Chan, Steven L. Groom, Chun‐Sean Lau, A. N. Payne, Moira Regelson, M. Saucedo, M. Schmitz, J. Stauffer, P. Wyatt, A. Zhang,

Tópico(s)

Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae

Resumo

We describe the contents and functionality of the NASA Exoplanet Archive, a database and toolset funded by NASA to support astronomers in the exoplanet community. The current content of the database includes interactive tables containing properties of all published exoplanets, Kepler planet candidates, threshold-crossing events, data validation reports and target stellar parameters, light curves from the Kepler and CoRoT missions and from several ground-based surveys, and spectra and radial velocity measurements from the literature. Tools provided to work with these data include a transit ephemeris predictor, both for single planets and for observing locations, light curve viewing and normalization utilities, and a periodogram and phased light curve service. The archive can be accessed at http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu.

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