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Of the nine confirmed transiting circumbinary planet systems, only Kepler-47 is known to contain more than one planet. Kepler-47 b (the inner planet) has an orbital period of 49.5 days and a radius of about $3,R_{oplus}$. Kepler-47 c (the outer planet) has an orbital period of 303.2 days and a radius of about $4.7,R_{oplus}$. Here we report the discovery of a third planet, Kepler-47 d (the middle planet), which has an orbital period of 187.4 days and a radius of about $7,R_{oplus}$. The presence of the middle planet allows us to place much better constraints on the masses of all three planets, where the $1sigma$ ranges are less than $26,M_{oplus}$, between $7-43,M_{oplus}$, and between $2-5,M_{oplus}$ for the inner, middle, and outer planets, respectively. The middle and outer planets have low bulk densities, with $rho_{rm middle} < 0.68$ g cm$^{-3}$ and $rho_{rm outer} < 0.26$ g cm$^{-3}$ at the $1sigma$ level. The two outer planets are tightly packed, assuming the nominal masses, meaning no other planet could stably orbit between them. All of the orbits have low eccentricities and are nearly coplanar, disfavoring violent scattering scenarios and suggesting gentle migration in the protoplanetary disk.
We present the discovery of KIC 9632895b, a 6.2 Earth-radius planet in a low-eccentricity, 240.5-day orbit about an eclipsing binary. The binary itself consists of a 0.93 and 0.194 solar mass pair of stars with an orbital period of 27.3 days. The pla
We report the discovery of a new Kepler transiting circumbinary planet (CBP). This latest addition to the still-small family of CBPs defies the current trend of known short-period planets orbiting near the stability limit of binary stars. Unlike the
We report the discovery and confirmation of a transiting circumbinary planet (PH1b) around KIC 4862625, an eclipsing binary in the Kepler field. The planet was discovered by volunteers searching the first six Quarters of publicly available Kepler dat
We report the discovery of a transiting, Rp = 4.347+/-0.099REarth, circumbinary planet (CBP) orbiting the Kepler K+M Eclipsing Binary (EB) system KIC 12351927 (Kepler-413) every ~66 days on an eccentric orbit with ap = 0.355+/-0.002AU, ep = 0.118+/-0
Kepler-20 is a solar-type star (V = 12.5) hosting a compact system of five transiting planets, all packed within the orbital distance of Mercury in our own Solar System. A transition from rocky to gaseous planets with a planetary transition radius of