The K2-ESPRINT Project III: A Close-in Super-Earth around a Metal-rich Mid-M Dwarf
Abstract
We validate a Rp=2.32 0.24R planet on a close-in orbit (P=2.260455 0.000041 days) around K2-28 (EPIC 206318379), a metal-rich M4-type dwarf in the Campaign 3 field of the K2 mission. Our follow-up observations included multi-band transit observations from the optical to the near infrared, low-resolution spectroscopy, and high-resolution adaptive-optics (AO) imaging. We perform a global fit to all the observed transits using a Gaussian process-based method and show that the transit depths in all passbands adopted for the ground-based transit follow-ups (r'2, zs,2, J, H, Ks) are within 2σ of the K2 value. Based on a model of the background stellar population and the absence of nearby sources in our AO imaging, we estimate the probability that a background eclipsing binary could cause a false positive to be < 2× 10-5. We also show that K2-28 cannot have a physically associated companion of stellar type later than M4, based on the measurement of almost identical transit depths in multiple passbands. There is a low probability for a M4 dwarf companion (≈ 0.072-0.04+0.02), but even if this were the case, the size of K2-28b falls within the planetary regime. K2-28b has the same radius (within 1σ) and experiences a similar irradiation from its host star as the well-studied GJ~1214b. Given the relative brightness of K2-28 in the near infrared (mKep=14.85 mag and mH=11.03 mag) and relatively deep transit (0.6-0.7\%), a comparison between the atmospheric properties of these two planets with future observations would be especially interesting.
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