Jason F. Rowe
Bishop's University
388 Papers
13.2K Citations
Jason F. Rowe is an academic researcher from Bishop's University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Planet & Exoplanet. The author has an hindex of 110, co-authored 374 publications. Previous affiliations of Jason F. Rowe include Ames Research Center & University of British Columbia.
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Papers
Kepler-1649b: An Exo-Venus in the Solar Neighborhood
Isabel Angelo,Isabel Angelo,Isabel Angelo,Jason F. Rowe,Steve B. Howell,Elisa V. Quintana,Martin Still,Andrew W. Mann,Ben Burningham,Ben Burningham,Thomas Barclay,David R. Ciardi,Daniel Huber,Daniel Huber,Daniel Huber,Stephen R. Kane +15 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the discovery and confirmation of an Earth-sized planet orbiting a nearby M5V star that receives incident flux at a level similar to that of Venus.
A search for transits of GJ 581\lowercase{e} and characterization of the host star variability using MOST space telescope photometry
Diana Dragomir,Jaymie M. Matthews,Rainer Kuschnig,Jason F. Rowe,Brett Gladman,David B. Guenther,Anthony F. J. Moffat,Slavek M. Rucinski,Dimitar Sasselov,Werner W. Weiss +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantify the sensitivity of the stellar brightness of the GJ 581 system to shallow transit signals using Monte Carlo simulations, and perform a transit search within the 3$σ$ transit windows corresponding to both the circular and Keplerian orbit ephemerides.
Validation of small Kepler transiting planet candidates in or near the habitable zone
Guillermo Torres,Stephen R. Kane,Jason F. Rowe,Natalie M. Batalha,Christopher E. Henze,David R. Ciardi,Thomas Barclay,William J. Borucki,Lars A. Buchhave,Justin R. Crepp,Mark E. Everett,Elliott P. Horch,Elliott P. Horch,Andrew W. Howard,Steve B. Howell,Howard Isaacson,Jon M. Jenkins,David W. Latham,Erik A. Petigura,Elisa V. Quintana +19 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the BLENDER technique to validate 15 of the candidates at a 99.73% (3 sigma) significance level or higher, and the other three at slightly lower confidence.
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Observational Constraints, Stellar Models, and Kepler Data for theta Cyg, the Brightest Star Observable by Kepler
J. A. Guzik,G. Houdek,William J. Chaplin,D. W. Kurtz,R. L. Gilliland,Fergal Mullally,Jason F. Rowe,Michael R. Haas,S. T. Bryson,Martin Still,Tabetha S. Boyajian +10 more
TL;DR: The V=4.48 F4 main-sequence star theta Cyg is the brightest star observable in the Kepler spacecraft field-of-view (FOV) as discussed by the authors.
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Spectropolarimetric follow-up of 8 rapidly rotating, X-ray bright FK Comae candidates
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an analysis of high-resolution Stokes $V$ observations obtained using ESPaDOnS@CFHT for 8 candidates of the KSwAGS survey.
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