Geoffrey Marcy American astronomer
Marcy, Geoff
VIAF ID: 71071851 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/71071851
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Geoffrey Marcy ‡c American astronomer
- 100 1 _ ‡a Marcy, Geoff
- 100 1 _ ‡a Marcy, Geoff
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (29)
Works
Title | Sources |
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THE ATMOSPHERES OF THE HOT-JUPITERS KEPLER-5b AND KEPLER-6b OBSERVED DURING OCCULTATIONS WITHWARM-SPITZERANDKEPLER | |
DETECTION OF STARS WITHIN ∼0.8 in OFKeplerOBJECTS OF INTEREST | |
THE DISCOVERY OF HD 37605cAND A DISPOSITIVE NULL DETECTION OF TRANSITS OF HD 37605b | |
THE DISTRIBUTION OF TRANSIT DURATIONS FORKEPLERPLANET CANDIDATES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THEIR ORBITAL ECCENTRICITIES | |
FUNDAMENTAL PROPERTIES OFKEPLERPLANET-CANDIDATE HOST STARS USING ASTEROSEISMOLOGY | |
Geoff Marcy and the search for other Earths, 2010: | |
HAT‐P‐7b: An Extremely Hot Massive Planet Transiting a Bright Star in theKeplerField | |
A high obliquity orbit for the Hot-Jupiter HATS-14b transiting a 5400K star | |
KEPLER-14b: A MASSIVE HOT JUPITER TRANSITING AN F STAR IN A CLOSE VISUAL BINARY | |
Kepler-1647b: the largest and longest-period Kepler transiting circumbinary planet | |
The Kepler-19 system: a transiting 2.2 r_{oplus}_ planet and a second planet detected via transit timing variations | |
KEPLER-21b: A 1.6REarthPLANET TRANSITING THE BRIGHT OSCILLATING F SUBGIANT STAR HD 179070 | |
The Kepler-454 system: a small, not-rocky inner planet, a jovian world, and a distant companion | |
The Kepler Follow-up Observation Program. II. Stellar Parameters from Medium- and High-resolution Spectroscopy | |
KEPLER MISSIONDESIGN, REALIZED PHOTOMETRIC PERFORMANCE, AND EARLY SCIENCE | |
KEPLEROBSERVATIONS OF TRANSITING HOT COMPACT OBJECTS | |
KOI-54: THEKEPLERDISCOVERY OF TIDALLY EXCITED PULSATIONS AND BRIGHTENINGS IN A HIGHLY ECCENTRIC BINARY | |
The Lick Planet Search: Detectability and Mass Thresholds | |
A Mass for the Extrasolar Planet Gliese 876[CLC]b[/CLC] Determined from [ITAL]Hubble Space Telescope[/ITAL] Fine Guidance Sensor 3 Astrometry and High-Precision Radial Velocities | |
The mass of KOI-94d and a relation for planet radius, mass, and incident flux | |
The mass-radius relation for 65 exoplanets smaller than 4 earth radii | |
MASSES, RADII, AND ORBITS OF SMALLKEPLERPLANETS: THE TRANSITION FROM GASEOUS TO ROCKY PLANETS | |
MODELINGKEPLERTRANSIT LIGHT CURVES AS FALSE POSITIVES: REJECTION OF BLEND SCENARIOS FOR KEPLER-9, AND VALIDATION OF KEPLER-9 d, A SUPER-EARTH-SIZE PLANET IN A MULTIPLE SYSTEM | |
The N2K Consortium. II. A Transiting Hot Saturn around HD 149026 with a Large Dense Core | |
The N2K Consortium. VI. Doppler Shifts without Templates and Three New Short‐Period Planets | |
The NASA-UC-UH ETA-Earth program. IV. A low-mass planet orbiting an M dwarf 3.6 PC from Earth | |
A near-infrared SETI experiment: probability distribution of false coincidences | |
A Neptune‐Mass Planet Orbiting the Nearby M Dwarf GJ 436 | |
A New Planet around an M Dwarf: Revealing a Correlation between Exoplanets and Stellar Mass | |
NON-DETECTION OF PREVIOUSLY REPORTED TRANSITS OF HD 97658b WITHMOSTPHOTOMETRY | |
The oblique orbit of the Super-Neptune HAT-P-11b | |
The occurrence and mass distribution of close-in super-Earths, Neptunes, and Jupiters | |
The Orbit of 16 Cygni AB | |
A Pair of Resonant Planets Orbiting GJ 876 | |
The Planet around 51 Pegasi | |
A Planet in a Circular Orbit with a 6 Year Period | |
PLANET OCCURRENCE WITHIN 0.25 AU OF SOLAR-TYPE STARS FROMKEPLER | |
A Planet Orbiting 47 Ursae Majoris | |
A Planet with a 3.1 Day Period around a Solar Twin | |
PLANETARY CANDIDATES OBSERVED BYKEPLER. III. ANALYSIS OF THE FIRST 16 MONTHS OF DATA | |
A Planetary Companion to a Nearby M4 Dwarf, Gliese 876 | |
A Planetary Companion to HD 40979 and Additional Planets Orbiting HD 12661 and HD 38529 | |
A plateau in the planet population below twice the size of Earth | |
PRE-SPECTROSCOPIC FALSE-POSITIVE ELIMINATION OFKEPLERPLANET CANDIDATES | |
A probable planetary companion to HD 39091 from the Anglo-Australian Planet Search | |
A prograde, low-inclination orbit for the very hot Jupiter WASP-3b | |
The PTF Orion project: a possible planet transiting a T-Tauri star | |
The red supergiant progenitor of supernova 2012aw (PTF12bvh) in Messier 95 | |
A rocky composition for an Earth-sized exoplanet | |
The same frequency of planets inside and outside open clusters of stars | |
The Search for an Atmospheric Signature of the Transiting Exoplanet HD 149026b1 | |
A Search for Laser Emission with Megawatt Thresholds from 5600 FGKM Stars | |
The search for planets around other stars, c1997: | |
A search for substellar companions to low-mass stars | |
The stellar obliquity and the long-period planet in the HAT-P-17 exoplanetary system | |
A sub-Mercury-sized exoplanet | |
A Sub‐Saturn Mass Planet Orbiting HD 3651 | |
A substellar companion in a 1.3 yr nearly circular orbit of HD 16760 | |
A super-earth-sized planet orbiting in or near the habitable zone around a sun-like star | |
A survey of stellar families: multiplicity of solar-type stars | |
Time-varying potassium in high-resolution spectra of the Type Ia supernova 2014j | |
The transit ingress and the tilted orbit of the extraordinarily eccentric exoplanet HD 80606b | |
TRANSIT TIMING OBSERVATIONS FROMKEPLER. IV. CONFIRMATION OF FOUR MULTIPLE-PLANET SYSTEMS BY SIMPLE PHYSICAL MODELS | |
A transiting "51 Peg-like" planet | |
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) | |
Transits of Known Planets Orbiting a Naked-eye Star | |
The TRENDS high-contrast imaging survey. IV. The occurrence rate of giant planets around M dwarfs | |
The TRENDS high-contrast imaging survey. V. Discovery of an old and cold benchmark T-dwarf orbiting the nearby G-star HD 19467 | |
Ultra-High-Precision Velocity Measurements of Oscillations in Centauri A | |
VALIDATION OF 12 SMALLKEPLERTRANSITING PLANETS IN THE HABITABLE ZONE | |
VALIDATION OFKEPLER'S MULTIPLE PLANET CANDIDATES. III. LIGHT CURVE ANALYSIS AND ANNOUNCEMENT OF HUNDREDS OF NEW MULTI-PLANET SYSTEMS | |
Water world larger than Earth |