The Kepler-113 system contains 2 exoplanets. It is located 855.67 light years away from the solar system.
| Mass | 0.75 solar masses |
| Radius | 0.69 solar radiae |
| Temperature | 4725 kelvin |
| Stellar Metallicity | 0.05 decimal exponent |
| Age | 6.89 billion years |
At more than 10 Earth masses, Kepler-113 b is an ice giant, a planet that is made up mostly of volatiles like water, amonia and methane, and enveloped by a dense hydrogen and helium atmosphere, much like Uranus and Neptune.
| Mass | 11.700 Earth masses |
| Density | 10.730 grams per cubic centimeter |
| Radius | 1.820 Earth radiae |
| Semi-major Axis | 0.0502 AU |
| Eccentricity | 0 |
| Orbital Period | 4.754 days |
| Discovery Method | Transit |
| Discovery Facility | Kepler |
| Discovery Telescope | 0.95 m Kepler Telescope |
| Discovery Instrument | Kepler CCD Array |
| Discovery Date | 2014-02 |
| Reference | Marcy et al. 2014 |
At more than 10 Earth masses, Kepler-113 c is an ice giant, a planet that is made up mostly of volatiles like water, amonia and methane, and enveloped by a dense hydrogen and helium atmosphere, much like Uranus and Neptune.
| Mass | 8.700 Earth masses |
| Density | NaN grams per cubic centimeter |
| Radius | 2.180 Earth radiae |
| Semi-major Axis | 0.0763 AU |
| Eccentricity | 0 |
| Orbital Period | 8.925 days |
| Discovery Method | Transit |
| Discovery Facility | Kepler |
| Discovery Telescope | 0.95 m Kepler Telescope |
| Discovery Instrument | Kepler CCD Array |
| Discovery Date | 2014-02 |
| Reference | Marcy et al. 2014 |