# Summary of K2 Program GO11039 Title: Monitoring of Targets Within 100 Parsecs PI: Redfield, Seth (Wesleyan University) CoIs: Cauley, Paul Wilson Science Goals and Objectives: Temporal monitoring of stars within 100 parsecs provides an opportunity to search for close planetary systems that are optimal for follow-up studies, as well as evaluate the stellar properties that are critical to the evolution of planetary atmospheres. A complete census of the physical properties of a star and planetary system is necessary for an evaluation of the habitability of planets. It is precisely these nearest systems that the question of habitability will be examined in greatest detail in the decades to come. I propose for consideration the sample of all nearby stars with reliable parallaxes within 100 pc. A planetary inventory of our immediate galactic neighborhood is attractive for many reasons. This sample is comprised of relatively bright stars, which means any form of follow-up (e.g., planetary atmosphere measurements [e.g., Redfield et al. 2008, Jensen et al. 2012], astrometry, direct imaging, spin-orbit alignment measurements, stellar metallicity, stellar activity) is easier, and possible with ground-based and space-based telescopes with a range of aperture sizes. This broadens the number of instruments observing these targets, encouraging independent confirmation of marginal detections, as well as experimenting with new observational techniques. Given the occurrence rates of short period planets from Freesin et al. (2013), it is likely that there are planets orbiting these stars. While some of these targets are likely monitored with radial velocity measurements, the hottest and coolest stars present significant challenges. A complementary transit search that is unbiased in this way, would be valuable. Estimate of the Number of Targets: Given the sparse distribution of very nearby stars, we estimate the total number of targets to be 200-300 stars (based on the numbers proposed in previous campaigns). This sample is likely to be dominated by cool, low-mass stars (typically G stars or cooler, including many M stars). In particular, there are likely to be a few extremely close stellar systems, within the 100 nearest stars, that should certainly be monitored. The bright, early type stars are also important to monitor, not only because of the difficulty in getting precision radial velocity measurements, but also because they facilitate better opportunities for transmission spectroscopy of their transiting planets. Methodology: Nearby stars are among the most well-studied stellar systems, making them an ideal sample to integrate the many components that go into an evaluation of habitability. An example is the evaluation of the stellar wind strength, which is critical to the long-term evolution of planetary atmospheres (Lammer et al. 2003). One of the only methods to detect the weak, but important, stellar winds of low mass stars is through the detection of the astrosphere, the analog to the heliosphere, where the outward pressure of the stellar wind balances the inward pressure of the surrounding local interstellar medium. This has only been possible with the nearest stars (i.e., within 30 pc; Wood et al. 2005, Edelman et al. 2014). While many of these stars are bright, and therefore more expensive in terms of pixel usage, it is worth pushing this constraint. Long cadence observations would be appropriate. Relevance of Proposed Research to this Solicitation: While I have only touched on the value of these targets in terms of exoplanet detections and the assessment of habitability, there is a long list of other research programs that this data would facilitate, even if no exoplanets are found. These include stellar activity (spots, rotation, flares) and stellar pulsation. This work identifies a sample of K2 targets, which are directly related to the original Kepler mission of planet discovery, and directly tied to Objective 1.6 in the NASA 2014 Strategic Plan. # Targets requested by this program that have been observed (55) EPIC ID, RA (J2000) [deg], Dec (J2000) [deg], magnitude, Investigation IDs 203530127, 253.586065, -25.82938, 7.111, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11902_LC|GO11012_SC 203790700, 254.466818, -24.918717, 8.773, GO11012_LC|GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11065_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11012_SC 204080225, 254.717439, -23.746573, 8.386, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11082_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 204231196, 254.200145, -23.150342, 6.393, GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11036_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC 204470855, 252.720075, -22.205801, 9.404, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC 204485155, 255.002814, -22.148935, 9.799, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11050_LC 204806561, 254.14009, -20.777029, 13.756, GO11039_LC 221348592, 266.072647, -29.263145, 11.735, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11018_LC|GO11039_LC 221620277, 265.626479, -28.748777, 8.868, GO11097_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11025_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11103_LC|GO11083_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11097_SC|GO11103_SC 221823709, 264.752764, -28.412556, 7.654, GO11012_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 224205093, 268.037933, -24.666793, 11.917, GO11039_LC 224535896, 263.371472, -24.071639, 8.79, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11012_SC 224668666, 262.706654, -23.8416, 7.349, GO11122_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC 224671808, 262.277324, -23.836117, 9.107, GO11049_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11032_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11025_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11050_LC 225070732, 261.505407, -23.171633, 8.135, GO11012_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 225152827, 263.509909, -23.031446, 7.356, GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC 226464131, 261.845051, -20.517059, 8.657, GO11012_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 229456369, 253.562345, -28.114943, 9.16, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC 230629135, 257.768186, -20.65457, 6.64, GO11122_LC|GO11048_LC|GO11035_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11085_LC 230748783, 256.777728, -19.50603, 8.866, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11065_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11012_SC 230855028, 257.0994, -18.466, 11.868, GO11049_LC|GO11123_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11015_LC|GO11019_LC 231365188, 256.498431, -22.856767, 9.712, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11050_LC 231459974, 257.534332, -29.97342, 9.39, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11062_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11083_LC 231585366, 257.985988, -29.47461, 9.257, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC 231848416, 255.225453, -28.39932, 9.216, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC 231990311, 255.168712, -27.792278, 8.124, GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC 232175483, 255.038212, -26.954082, 9.356, GO11049_LC|GO11123_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC 233488533, 260.218491, -17.427704, 12.95, GO11010_LC|GO11039_LC 233489400, 261.316196, -17.42204, 9.714, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC 233933903, 259.099557, -21.85795, 7.401, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11062_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11083_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 233947029, 258.015069, -21.791134, 8.38, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 233997386, 259.993625, -21.53062, 9.408, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11065_LC|GO11036_LC|GO11039_LC 234426962, 260.142964, -19.33375, 6.396, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11062_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11083_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11085_LC|GO11012_SC 234863731, 258.130271, -25.227159, 8.189, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11062_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11083_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 234991897, 260.281848, -24.68355, 8.642, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC 235031898, 261.294912, -24.50565, 9.525, GO11049_LC|GO11123_LC|GO11039_LC 235382362, 260.381709, -22.925927, 8.562, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 235409850, 261.09951, -22.800882, 8.584, GO11012_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC 235636710, 260.974934, -29.821159, 8.235, GO11012_LC|GO11049_LC|GO11048_LC|GO11039_LC 235922938, 259.424731, -28.938456, 8.601, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 236012973, 261.463201, -28.655558, 8.845, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 236225131, 260.823786, -27.966917, 9.176, GO11012_LC|GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11012_SC 236281955, 261.190784, -27.778653, 9.626, GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC 236285338, 258.005048, -27.76727, 12.345, GO11049_LC|GO11010_LC|GO11123_LC|GO11018_LC|GO11039_LC 236344582, 259.124254, -27.565541, 8.105, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 236406950, 260.227753, -27.344462, 8.274, GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11036_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC 236506953, 258.559376, -26.984418, 6.594, GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC 237799552, 259.429776, -30.770591, 8.854, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 237940974, 259.226305, -30.351421, 7.263, GO11122_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC|GO11019_LC 237990157, 260.602351, -30.204154, 8.444, GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC 238277236, 262.331424, -16.791418, 9.679, GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11098_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11036_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11052_LC 240346820, 264.047335, -29.679422, 10.601, GO11049_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11039_LC 241011563, 262.208133, -26.72971, 8.447, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11083_LC|GO11012_SC 242184803, 264.697555, -30.131391, 8.657, GO11012_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11122_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11024_LC|GO11039_LC|GO11019_LC|GO11012_SC 242219524, 264.514988, -30.015976, 10.722, GO11049_LC|GO11010_LC|GO11123_LC|GO11071_LC|GO11018_LC|GO11002_LC|GO11039_LC