2019 Exoplanet Archive News

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For current news, see the Exoplanet Archive News page. For other news archives by year, see the 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, and 2011-12 archives.

For a compilation of periodic tips that have appeared in past news items, see the Tip Archive.

To view only the most recently added planets and updated parameters (default and non-default), see this pre-filtered and pre-sorted interactive table.

Note to our users: The link format on this page allows you to easily access overview pages for both planet hosts and their planets. Click on either the host name or the planet letter to view the object's respective overview page.


December 23, 2019

The NASA Exoplanet Archive staff is on a winter break from Dec. 24 through Jan. 1, during which there will be no data or software updates. Responses to Helpdesk tickets and social media may also be delayed. We wish everyone a cozy and relaxing holiday season, full of earthly and astronomical surprises.

If you are attending the American Astronomical Society (AAS) winter meeting in Honolulu, Hawai'i, stop by the Caltech/IPAC NExScI booth and say hello!

December 18, 2019

We've updated the Kepler Certified False Positives table with the final analysis from the False Positive Working Group. The new data, which includes 1,419 newly examined KOIs, can be browsed in the Kepler Certified False Positives interactive table.

Additionally, we've added new Kepler DR25 False Positive Vetting Forms documenting the inputs and decisions of the FP Working Group. These forms include the DR25 DV Summaries, major results from the DR25 DV Reports, and additional vetting metrics computed outside the Kepler data processing pipeline, including some information not contained in the DR25 TCERT vetting reports.

The new or updated files are:

The files and documentation can also be accessed from the DR 25 Reliability table on the Completeness and Reliability page.

December 16, 2019

The New Archive Services Are Here!

Since the archive was created in 2011, the field of exoplanet science has evolved in relatively a short time. The astronomical community's understanding of planetary systems has also evolved, so it was time to update the archive to reflect this new world.

The NASA Exoplanet Archive is happy to announce the alpha release of two important new features: completely redesigned System Overview pages and the new Planetary Systems interactive table.

The New Planetary Systems Table

This new table combines the data from the Confirmed Planets and Extended Planet Data tables, giving users an interactive way to browse ALL solutions for planet and host star solutions, regardless of their relationship. This approach enables the archive to present data for atypical systems, including free-floating planets and those with multiple stars.

Other PS table features:

  • Each row contains planet, stellar and system (TESS Input Catalog) properties.
  • All solutions for confirmed exoplanet systems are now available in a single table, including Kepler, K2, and TESS candidate solutions.
  • The new table also provides a nearly complete identification of published stellar companions in confirmed planetary systems.
  • We've added measurements of projected and true planet obliquities.
  • The table contains a summary of data sets available in the archive for a given system.

Access the Planetary Systems table from the Data drop-down menu or our homepage's Work With Data area:

Redesigned Overview Pages

The new System Overview pages for the confirmed planetary systems are a consolidation of several separate overview pages that existed for confirmed planets, planet hosts, planet candidates, and various Kepler Mission designated-objects. This unified view provides users an interactive aggregation of curated data for a given system, as well as a launching point for more detailed data products and archive tools that extend the use of the data.

To access a system overview page, go to the Planetary Systems interactive table and click on a planet name. (See example)

Other noteworthy features include:

  • Summarized system architecture, data and graphics at the top of the page for quick reference, including flags for planets that are refuted or considered controversial. (See example)
  • A special Exoplanet Archive Notes section for additional information about the system, such as whether one of its planets had been refuted and then reinstated.
  • Color-coded solutions show all planet parameters associated with a given set of stellar parameters. (See example)
  • Collapsible and expandable sections allow users to customize their view of the available data.
  • Flexible design supports various types of system architectures.
  • A Bibliography section lists all published literature references included in the archive, with links to the papers in ADS. (See example)

With more than 4,100 confirmed exoplanets and their host stars in the archive and hundreds to thousands more planets expected to be discovered in years to come, we're confident these new changes allow us to continue providing exoplanet data in the best way that serves our users. Please note that today's release is considered an alpha, which means we're actively eliciting user feedback on what works, what doesn't, and what could work better.

Our plan is to continue improving these services so they are mature enough to replace the Confirmed Planets table, Extended Planet Data table, and existing Planet Host and Confirmed Planet Overview pages in early 2020. The old overview pages will continue to be available through the Explore the Archive search interface on our home page.

Please send us your feedback through the Helpdesk and follow the archive on social media or our email list to stay informed. See our Connect page for links.

December 5, 2019

There are five new exoplanets in the archive this week, as well as a bounty of new planet parameter sets from various papers. The new planets are: KIC 5095269 b, HD 213885 b (TESS planet) & c, WASP-18 c (TESS planet), and WASP-126 c (TESS planet).

Find the new planet data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables. You can also view the planets with this week's new parameters in this pre-filtered interactive table.

November 21, 2019

Please Take Our User Survey!

We'd like to learn more about our users and how they use our data, tools, and other services. Please click on the following link and answer a few simple questions:

NASA Exoplanet Archive Usage Survey

The survey should not take more than 5–7 minutes of your time. Thank you!

Six Planets This Week

This week we have six new planets, including three transiting, two radial velocity planets, and one pulsar timing planet. They are: NGTS-8 b, NGTS-9 b, Qatar-6 b, HD 220197 b, HD 233832 b, and PSR B0329+54 b.

Find this week's new data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

Upcoming Changes to the NASA Exoplanet Archive!

The NASA Exoplanet Archive staff have been working on some improvements that we hope will enhance our users' experience by providing more a integrated and streamlined interface. These plans include:

  1. A New Planetary Systems Table: This will be a new interactive table that will display all parameter sets in the archive associated with confirmed and candidate planetary systems, including parameter values for associated planetary, stellar, and system properties. These values are extracted from the refereed literature, mission deliveries (e.g., Kepler and TESS), and the TESS Input Catalog.
  2. Redesigned Overview Pages: Rather than having separate overview pages for confirmed planets, planet hosts, and planet candidates, there will be a single, consolidated overview page for each planetary system. The page will contain data as well as links to other archive tools and resources that extend the use of those data.
  3. Table Access Protocol (TAP) Support: A Table Access Protocol (TAP) API will be connected to the new Planetary Systems Table.

We plan to roll out these enhancements in mid-December for initial testing, and we encourage our users to try them out and send us your feedback and suggestions. The archive's existing API, overviews, and Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data interactive tables will not be affected in the short term. However, they will eventually be replaced by the new and improved services in 2020. More details will be provided in the coming months, so follow the archive on social media or our email list to stay informed. See our Connect page for links.

November 7, 2019

This week we have nine new planets found using four different discovery methods, including five new TESS planets, as well as 18 microlensing solutions and one new planet parameter set. The new planets are: LP 791-18 b & c (transit), TOI 163 b (transit), TOI 125 b & c (transit), Kepler-448 c (transit timing variations), KMT-2018-BLG-1990L b (microlensing), MOA-bin-29 b (microlensing), and HD 125390 b (radial velocity).

Find this week's new data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables. New microlensing solutions can be found in the Microlensing Planets interactive table.

October 24, 2019

We've added 11 planets this week, including HD 97048 b, an exoplanet discovered using a different method based on the kinematic interaction between the circumstellar disk and the orbiting planet. The method is described in the planet discovery paper by Pinte et al. (2019).

The other new planets are: OGLE-2015-BLG-1649L b, V1298 Tau c, d & e, HU Aqr AB b & c, HW Vir b, 7 CMa c, NY Vir c, and eps Ind A b. There are also new planet parameter sets for 13 planets.

Find this week's new data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

October 10, 2019

We have 16 new planets, including GJ 15 A b, which was refuted and then reinstated based on new published data in Pinamonti et al. The same paper also announced a new planet in the same system, GJ 15 A c.

The other new planets this week are: GJ 27.1 b, GJ 160.2 b, GJ 180 b & c, GJ 229 A b, GJ 3512 b, GJ 422 b, GJ 433 c, GJ 682 b & c, WASP-178 b, WASP-184 b, WASP-185 b, and WASP-192 b. Find their data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

October 8, 2019

Exoplanet Researchers Win a Nobel Prize!

It's been an exciting week for exoplanet research, with two astronomers awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for their 1995 discovery of 51 Pegasi b, the first planet observed to orbit a Sun-like star. This discovery launched a new field of astronomical exploration that continues to this day.

Here are some resources on the exoplanet that started it all:

September 26, 2019

There are two new confirmed planets this week, NGTS-6 b and WASP-180 A b, as well as additional parameter sets for 13 known planets. Find their data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

Data for the 28 K2 candidates listed in Zink et al. (2019) are also now available through our K2 Candidates table.

September 12, 2019

Eleven New Planets: We've added 11 planets this week, including HR 5183 b, which was discovered by Caltech graduate student Sarah Blunt and noted in the news for its unusual orbit. We've also added 21 new microlensing solutions to the Microlensing Planets interactive table.

The new planets are: HR 5183 b, WASP-169 b, WASP-171 b, WASP-175 b, WASP-182 b, KELT-24 b, OGLE-2018-BLG-0740L b, OGLE-2018-BLG-1011L b & c, KMT-2016-BLG-0212L b, and OGLE-2016-BLG-1067L b. Find their data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

More than 800 New K2 Candidates: The 818 K2 planet candidates published in Kruse et al. (2019) are now available through our K2 Candidates table.

August 29, 2019

A second planet detected in the nearby beta Pictoris system is in the archive this week. See the beta Pic c Overview page and read the discovery paper by Lagrange et al.

We've also added 18 more stellar and planet parameter sets for various objects, which can be viewed in the Extended Planet Data interactive table.

Also, the number of TESS Objects of Interest (TOI) in ExoFOP-TESS has surpassed the 1,000-mark! These TESS candidates were identified by the TESS Project for further investigation. Browse the TOIs in our new interactive table or the ExoFOP-TESS site.

August 15, 2019

We have three noteworthy updates this week:

  1. New Confirmed Planets and Parameters: There are 12 new planets this week, plus a slew of planet parameter sets. The new planets are: K2-43 c, K2-146 c, K2-198 c & d, LTT 1445 A b, HAT-P-69 b, HAT-P-70 b, HATS-54 b, HATS-55 b, HATS-56 b, HATS-57 b, and HATS-58 A b.

    To view the new planet and stellar data, use the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data interactive tables.

  2. New Model Atmospheres Data Set! The archive now serves the Frontier Development Lab PyATMOS data set, comprising ~124,000 model atmosphere structure profiles for Earth-like planets. This data set was provided by a collaboration between the 2018 Frontier Development Lab program led by William Fawcett and Daniel Angerhausen.

    Our new interface allows you to interactively search, filter, and preview the models, and to download a single model, your chosen subset of the models, or the entire data set as a bulk download. To access the data from the interactive table or read the documentation, click the Data drop-down menu from any archive web page and select Contributed Data Sets. The FDL PyATMOS links are at the bottom of the page under Synthetic Data.

  3. New TESS Project Candidates Table! We've created a new interactive table of TESS Objects of Interest (TOI) that were identified by the TESS Project, as well as previously known transiting planets and false positives detected by TESS. This list is built periodically from the TOI list available on ExoFOP-TESS, which is updated twice daily. Access the interactive table from the archive home page either by clicking the TESS Project Candidates count box or the TESS Project Candidates button or the TESS tab of the Transit Surveys area.

    Please Note: The time and date of the last update for the Exoplanet Archive's TOI list is included the tab at the top of the interactive table. For the most up-to-date versions of the TOI candidates, see the TOI list on the ExoFOP-TESS site.

August 1, 2019

Two TESS systems that are in the news, TOI 270 and GJ 357, were added to the archive this week:

  1. TOI 270 b, c, & d: With planets that straddle a known gap in observed planet radii, this system promises to help us learn more about how exoplanets and their atmospheres form. For more details, read NASA's press release and the discovery paper.
  2. GJ 357 b, c, & d includes the first nearby super-Earth that could potentially harbor life. Read the media alert and the discovery paper.

To view the new planet and stellar data, use the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data interactive tables.

July 25, 2019

We have nine new planets this week, featuring HR 858 b, c, & d, a compact three-planet system of super-Earths confirmed with TESS photometry, and a new FIFTH planet in Kepler-82, system with four previously known planets. There are also three new K2 planets, another new TESS planet, a new microlensing planet, and new sets of planet parameters.

The new planets are: HR 858 b, c, & d, Kepler-82 f, K2-310 b & c, K2-311 b, WASP-166 b, and KMT-2017-BLG-0165L b.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

July 11, 2019

This week we have added seven new planets: DS Tuc A b, DE CVn b, HIP 79098 AB b, Kepler-411 d and e, OGLE-2015-BLG-1670L b and OGLE-2018-BLG-0596L b.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

June 27, 2019

This week we have added six new planets: Teegarden's Star b and c, CI Tau b, V1298 Tau b, WASP-87 b, and HD 126525 b. Teegarden's Star is an ultra-cool dwarf star only 12 light years away, and the two newly discovered Earth-mass planets are both potentially habitable.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

June 13, 2019

And the winner is: The confirmed planet count increases by 31 this week, bringing the total exoplanet count to 4,003! That means we have a winner for our #Exoplanet4K contest! Congratulations to Twitter follower Spyder Webb (@Spyder_Webb), who won the random drawing. Your full-color print of the 55 Cancri e poster from the Exoplanet Travel Bureau is on its way!

The archive staff thanks everyone who participated in the contest. We've created a page to showcase some of the more memorable entries.

New Planets: The new planets this week are: K2-16 d, K2-32 e, K2-50 c, K2-166 c, K2-168 c, EPIC 201238110 b (K2-296 b), EPIC 201497682 b (K2-297 b), EPIC 201841433 b (K2-298 b), EPIC 206024342 b (K2-299 b), EPIC 206032309 b (K2-300 b), EPIC 206042996 b (K2-301 b), EPIC 206215704 b (K2-302 b), EPIC 206317286 b (K2-303 b), EPIC 212297394 b (K2-304 b), EPIC 212424622 b (K2-305 b), EPIC 212499991 b (K2-306 b), EPIC 212587672 b (K2-307 b), K2-282 c, and L 98-59 b, c, & d, HD 180617 b, LSPM J2116+0234 b, KELT 23 A b, TOI 150.01, Kepler-65 e, PDS 70 c, EPIC 246865365 b (K2-308 b), HD 2685 b, GJ 49 b, and NSVS 14256825 b.

Additionally, there are new planet parameter sets for HIP 41378 b, c, d, e, & f, Kepler-25 b, c, & d, Kepler-65 b, c, & d, Kepler-68 b, c, & d, K2-32 b, c, & d, Gl 686 b. The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

May 23, 2019

There are two new transiting planets, K2-295 b and K2-133 e, and seven new sets of planet parameters in the archive this week. The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

May 16, 2019

This week we have 18 new planets, bringing the total confirmed planet count for our #Exoplanet4K contest to 3,970!

The new planets are: HD 210193 b, HD 211970 b, HD 39855 b, HIP 35173 b, HD 102843 b, HD 103949 b, HD 206255 b, HD 21411 b, HD 64114 b, HD 8326 b, HIP 54373 b & c, HD 24085 b, HIP 71135 b, NGTS-4 b, NGTS-5 b, and HD 15337 b & c.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

May 9, 2019

This week there are two new TESS planets, TOI 216 b and c, both transiting with transit timing variations, and HD 221420 b, which was confirmed with the radial velocity method. There are also new parameter sets for HD 92987 b and HD 219077 b.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

May 2, 2019

We've added three new transiting planets discovered by the Qatar Exoplanet Survey (QES), bringing our exoplanet count to 3,949. For those who are following along with our #Exoplanet4K contest, that means only 51 planets until we reach 4,000!

The new planets are Qatar-8 b, Qatar-9 b, and Qatar-10 b. Their data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

Make a Science-Ready TESS Image Mosaic: NExScI released this science-ready mosaic created with TESS data of the first five sectors of the South Ecliptic Pole. Create your TESS image mosaic with the source files available on the TESS ExoFOP web page and the Montage Image Mosaic engine on the Montage website.

April 25, 2019

There are two new planets this week, both very newsworthy in their own way:

  • HD 21749 c is the first Earth-sized planet discovered by TESS! Read about it in the press release.
  • Kepler-47 d is a third, transiting planet in a circumbinary system. Its orbit is located in between the orbits of the b and c planets that were previously known. See the press release for details.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

Also, our Exoplanet Community Follow-up Program (ExoFOP) community has grown to 800 users, who use the site to download and share their Kepler, K2 and TESS data! ExoFOP-TESS already has 93 unique users sharing content after just one year of the telescope's space operations.

April 18, 2019

Four newly confirmed transiting planets are in the archive this week, as well as 1,977 updated ephemerides for Kepler confirmed planets—65 of which have also been identified to have possible transit timing variations. The new planets are: HD 221416 b, WASP-177 b, WASP-181 b, and WASP-183 b.

The new planet data (including the updated TTV flags) can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables. The updated ephemerides can be accessed from each planet's overview page, as well as our Transit and Ephemeris Service. The list of 1,977 Kepler planets is published in Gajdoš, Vaňko, & Parimucha 2019.

April 11, 2019

We've added seven new planets, all detected using the radial velocity method, many of which have some of the longest-measured orbital periods, including one extending beyond 40 years! The new planets are: GJ 685 b, HD 13724 b, HD 181234 b, HD 25015 b, HD 92987 b, HD 50499 c, and HD 92788 c.

Also added: new sets of planet parameters for three known exoplanets: HD 50499 b, HD 92788 b, and HD 98649 b.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

April 5, 2019

New MOA Light Curves! The Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics (MOA) collaboration has contributed a new data set to the archive consisting of approximately 6,000 light curves (22 GB) acquired from 2006 to 2014.

These data can be downloaded in bulk from our MOA page, which also contains the observational coverage map.

April 4, 2019

New Planets: This week we've added seven new confirmed planets, including K2-293 b and K2-294 b, the first K2 exoplanets found using machine-learning algorithms. Fun Fact: NExScI scientist Jessie Christiansen was quoted in an NPR story on these discoveries.

The other new planets are: Qatar-7 b, K2-63 c, TOI 172 b, KOI-1599.02, and KOI-1599.01. The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

March 21, 2019

Here are the archive's updates this week:

Microlensing Planets Table: With 33 microlensing solutions added this week, the archive's Microlensing Planets Table is now the first public and comprehensive database of published microlensing planet models.

One Planet and a Plethora of Planet Parameters: New planet Gl 686 b is in the archive, as well as 233 new sets of planet parameters. The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

March 14, 2019

There are two new microlensing planets this week, KMT-2017-BLG-1038L b and KMT-2017-BLG-1146L b. Also, we've added new planet parameter sets for nine exoplanets.

The new planet data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

March 5, 2019

Kepler-1658 b: The first Kepler planetary candidate, KOI-4.01, confirmed as a true planetary system!

KOI-4.01 was identified by the Kepler Spacecraft 10 years ago. This week it was announced at the Kepler & K2 Science Conference V that KOI-4.01 is confirmed as exoplanet Kepler-1658 b. We've already added it to the archive; see its Confirmed Planet Overview page, press release, and the discovery paper (Chontos et al. 2019).

Six other planets added this week are: PDS 70 b, HD 219666 b, GJ 378 b, GJ 411 b, HD 1397 b, and WASP-190 b. We've also added new microlensing solutions for OGLE-2012-BLG-0950L b and MOA-2013-BLG-605L b.

The new planets' data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables. The new solutions are in the Microlensing Planets interactive table.

February 21, 2019

Microlensing Magic: We have one new microlensing planet, KMT-2016-BLG-1107 b, and eight more microlensing solutions for four microlensing planets: MOA-2010-BLG-073L b, MOA-2011-BLG-293L b, MOA-2011-BLG-322L b, and MOA-2012-BLG-006L b.

The new planet's data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables. The new solutions are in the Microlensing Planets interactive table.

Also, we've added new transmission spectroscopy data for XO-2 N b.

February 14, 2019

Countdown to 4,000 Planets! We're only 84 confirmed planets away from reaching 4,000 in the archive! To celebrate this next milestone, we're having a contest!

Show or tell us in your own words or images what YOU think the 4000th planet could look like. Would it be a puffy hot Jupiter in a binary system? Or a rocky super-Earth in a multi-planet system? Or perhaps it's a world made entirely of water or ice?

This contest is open to all ages, and entries can be anything from a crayon drawing to a haiku. Get creative!

To enter, publicly tweet to us at @NASAExoArchive or post on our Facebook page with a link to your entry. You must include the #Exoplanet4K hashtag to be entered in the random drawing. The winner, randomly drawn from all entries, will receive a full-color print of the 55 Cancri e poster from the Exoplanet Travel Bureau.

Have fun and good luck!

New Data This Week: We've added HATS-70 b, GJ 143 b, HD 23472 b & c to the archive, as well as new planet parameter sets for X0-2 N b. These data can be found in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

There are also new transmission spectra for X0-2 N b and XO-1 b, and new microlensing solutions for MOA-2008-BLG-310L b and MOA-2009-BLG-319L b.

February 7, 2019

21 Confirmed Planets Added: Several previously removed planets were added back to the archive this week based on radial velocity data published in Udry et al. (2018), as well as some new planets from the same paper. There is another planet, K2-292 b (a.k.a. HD 119130 b) from Luque et al. (2018), new planet parameter sets for K2-264 b & c and HD 20782 b, and new transmission spectroscopy for XO-2 N b.

The full list of planets from the Udry paper are: HD 20003 b & c, HD 20781 b, c, d & e, HD 21693 b & c, HD 31527 b, c & d, HD 45184 b & c, HD 51608 b & c, HD 134060 b & c, and HD 136352 b, c, & d. The reinstated planets are listed on the Removed Targets page.

The new planet and stellar data can be accessed from the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

January 31, 2019

This week we added K2-289 b and the third confirmed TESS planet, HD 202772 A b. View their data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

We also removed HD 73256 b based on a published refutation. Note: For a comprehensive list of all targets removed or excluded from the archive, see the Removed Targets page. For more information about the archive's criteria for classifying and including objects, see our Exoplanet Criteria page.

January 24, 2019

Five New Planets: We've added five new planets this week, including LHS 3844 b, the second confirmed planet discovered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission. The other four planets are: K2-290 b & c, K2-291 b, and GJ 4276 b. View their data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

UKIRT DR3 Microlensing Survey Data: We've added almost 26 million light curves from the 2018 United Kingdom InfraRed Telescope (UKIRT) Microlensing Survey, which tips the total number of light curves in the archive above 100 million! Other data sets served include Kepler, K2, KELT, SuperWASP, CoRoT, and others. See our Holdings page for details.

You may access the UKIRT DR3 data, as well as previous UKIRT releases, from the UKIRT Bulk Download page. Or, use the UKIRT search interface to find a subset of data and browse them in an interactive table (enter 2018 for Survey Year to view DR3 data). Read the documentation for more information.

Many thanks to the UKIRT Microlensing Team for providing these data to our users.

January 17, 2019

There have been 11 transiting and two radial velocity planets added to the archive this week. They are: Kepler-730 c, HD 202696 b & c, HATS-60 b, HATS-61 b, HATS-62 b, HATS-63 b, HATS-64 b, HATS-65 b, HATS-66 b, HATS-67 b, HATS-68 b, and HATS-69 b.

View their data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.

January 10, 2019

The first planets to be added in 2019 are three single, transiting K2 planets, one of which (K2-288 B b) was found by citizen scientists using Exoplanet Explorers! The other two planets are K2-286 b and K2-287 b. See the press briefing for K2-288 B b, and read the discovery paper.

View their data in the Confirmed Planets, Composite Planet Data, and Extended Planet Data tables.