GeminiFocus May 2014 | Page 9

proximity (to address how close to Kepler-186 another source could be resolved) and magnitude (to determine the faintest a nearby source could be detected). The exceptional data from DSSI allowed us to be sensitive to stars just 4 AU from Kepler-186 (about the distance between Jupiter and the Sun in our own solar system). The Keck data helped us rule out sources at fainter magnitudes. No nearby sources were seen which we built into our false positive model to conclude that the probability that Kepler-186f orbits the Mdwarf star is 99.98%. Kepler-186f, at a distance of about 500 light years from Earth, is too far away for any near-future ground or space-based observations that could indicate the presence of an atmosphere or oceans. This confirmation does, however, show that Earth-sized planets in the habitable zone of stars other than our Sun do exist. Given the fact that M dwarfs comprise more than 70% of all mainsequence stars in our galaxy, and that the majority of nearby stars — which are better suited for follow-up observations — are M dwarfs, planets like Kepler-186f may be common, and Gemini will no doubt play a large role in confirming them. Elisa Quintana is a scientist at the SETI Institute and a NPP Senior Fellow on the Kepler Team at NASA’s Ames Research Center. She can be reached at: [email protected] Steve B. Howell is the Project Scientist for the NASA Kepler Mission, at NASA Ames Research Center, near San Francisco, CA. He can be reached at: [email protected] Tom Barclay is an SO Support Scientist on the Kepler Team at NASA’s Ames Research Center. He can be at: [email protected] Jason F. Rowe is scientist for Kepler at the NASA Ames Research Center who helped analyze the Gemini data for this work. He can be reached at: [email protected] April 2014 GeminiFocus 7