5 research outputs found
Planet Hunters: Assessing the Kepler Inventory of Short Period Planets
We present the results from a search of data from the first 33.5 days of the
Kepler science mission (Quarter 1) for exoplanet transits by the Planet Hunters
citizen science project. Planet Hunters enlists members of the general public
to visually identify transits in the publicly released Kepler light curves via
the World Wide Web. Over 24,000 volunteers reviewed the Kepler Quarter 1 data
set. We examine the abundance of \geq 2 R\oplus planets on short period (< 15
days) orbits based on Planet Hunters detections. We present these results along
with an analysis of the detection efficiency of human classifiers to identify
planetary transits including a comparison to the Kepler inventory of planet
candidates. Although performance drops rapidly for smaller radii, \geq 4
R\oplus Planet Hunters \geq 85% efficient at identifying transit signals for
planets with periods less than 15 days for the Kepler sample of target stars.
Our high efficiency rate for simulated transits along with recovery of the
majority of Kepler \geq 4 R\oplus planets suggest suggests the Kepler inventory
of \geq 4 R\oplus short period planets is nearly complete.Comment: 41 pages,13 figures, 8 tables, accepted to Ap