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Kepler-186 f

Kepler-186f.png

129.94

days to orbit Kepler-186

0.54

Kepler-186 times the mass of the Sun

2014

Discovered in

1.17

times the size of Earth

172

parsecs away from Earth

Kepler-452b

Kepler-452b.png

384.84

days to orbit Kepler-452

1.04

Kepler-452 times the mass of the Sun

2015

Discovered in

1.63

times the size of Earth

560.62

parsecs away from Earth

Kepler-16b

Kepler-16b.png

228.78

days to orbit Kepler-16

0.69

Kepler-16 times the mass of the Sun

2011

Discovered in

8.449

times the size of Earth

75.25

parsecs away from Earth

Kepler-22b

Kepler-22b.png

289.96

days to orbit Kepler-22

0.97

Kepler-22 times the mass of the Sun

2011

Discovered in

2.38

times the size of Earth

190

parsecs away from Earth

HD 40307g

HD 40307.png

197.8

days to orbit HD 40307

0.77

HD 40307 times the mass of the Sun

2013

Discovered in

times the size of Earth

12.94

parsecs away from Earth

HD 85512b

HD 85512b.png

58.34

days to orbit HD 85512

0.43

HD 85512 times the mass of the Sun

2011

Discovered in

times the size of Earth

11.28

parsecs away from Earth

Tau Ceti e

Tau Ceti e.png

162.87

days to orbit Tau Ceti

0.78

Tau Ceti times the mass of the Sun

2017

Discovered in

times the size of Earth

3.6

parsecs away from Earth

CoRoT 7b

CoRoT 7b.png

0.85

days to orbit CoRoT 7

0.82

CoRoT 7 times the mass of the Sun

2009

Discovered in

1.681

times the size of Earth

160.64

parsecs away from Earth

K2-18b

K2-18b.png

32.94

days to orbit K2-18

0.34

K2-18 times the mass of the Sun

2015

Discovered in

2.37

times the size of Earth

38.07

parsecs away from Earth

Tau Ceti f

Tau Ceti f.png

636.13

days to orbit Tau Ceti

0.78

Tau Ceti times the mass of the Sun

2017

Discovered in

times the size of Earth

3.6

parsecs away from Earth

Citations

This work has made use of data from the European Space Agency (ESA) mission Gaia (https://www.cosmos.esa.int/gaia), processed by the Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC, https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia/dpac/consortium). Funding for the DPAC has been provided by national institutions, in particular the institutions participating in the Gaia Multilateral Agreement.

This research has made use of the SIMBAD database, operated at CDS, Strasbourg, France.

"The SIMBAD astronomical database", Wenger et al.

Pauli Virtanen, Ralf Gommers, Travis E. Oliphant, Matt Haberland, Tyler Reddy, David Cournapeau, Evgeni Burovski, Pearu Peterson, Warren Weckesser, Jonathan Bright, Stéfan J. van der Walt, Matthew Brett, Joshua Wilson, K. Jarrod Millman, Nikolay Mayorov, Andrew R. J. Nelson, Eric Jones, Robert Kern, Eric Larson, CJ Carey, İlhan Polat, Yu Feng, Eric W. Moore, Jake VanderPlas, Denis Laxalde, Josef Perktold, Robert Cimrman, Ian Henriksen, E.A. Quintero, Charles R Harris, Anne M. Archibald, Antônio H. Ribeiro, Fabian Pedregosa, Paul van Mulbregt, and SciPy 1.0 Contributors. (2019) SciPy 1.0–Fundamental Algorithms for Scientific Computing in Python.

Travis E. Oliphant. A guide to NumPy, USA: Trelgol Publishing, (2006).

Stéfan van der Walt, S. Chris Colbert and Gaël Varoquaux. The NumPy Array: A Structure for Efficient Numerical Computation, Computing in Science & Engineering, 13, 22-30 (2011)

John D. Hunter. Matplotlib: A 2D Graphics Environment, Computing in Science & Engineering, 9, 90-95 (2007)

This work made use of PyAstronomy. https://github.com/sczesla/PyAstronomy

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