We present the radial velocity confirmation of the extrasolar planet
Kepler-447b, initially detected as a candidate by the Kepler mission. In this
work, we analyze its transit signal and the radial velocity data obtained with
the Calar Alto Fiber-fed Echelle spectrograph (CAFE). By simultaneously
modeling both datasets, we obtain the orbital and physical properties of the
system. According to our results, Kepler-447b is a Jupiter-mass planet
(Mp=1.37−0.46+0.48MJup), with an estimated radius of
Rp=1.65−0.56+0.59RJup (uncertainties provided in this work are
3σ unless specified). This translates into a sub-Jupiter density. The
planet revolves every ∼7.8 days in a slightly eccentric orbit
(e=0.123−0.036+0.037) around a G8V star with detected activity in the
Kepler light curve. Kepler-447b transits its host with a large impact parameter
(b=1.076−0.086+0.112), being one of the few planetary grazing transits
confirmed so far and the first in the Kepler large crop of exoplanets. We
estimate that only around 20% of the projected planet disk occults the stellar
disk. The relatively large uncertainties in the planet radius are due to the
large impact parameter and short duration of the transit. Planets with such an
extremely large impact parameter can be used to detect and analyze interesting
configurations such as additional perturbing bodies, stellar pulsations,
rotation of a non-spherical planet, or polar spot-crossing events. All these
scenarios would periodically modify the transit properties (depth, duration,
and time of mid-transit), what could be detectable with sufficient accurate
photometry. Short-cadence photometric data (at the 1 minute level) would help
in the search for these exotic configurations in grazing planetary transits
like that of Kepler-447b.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 13 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables. This
version replaces an earlier version of the pape