Title: Ground-based Transit Observation of the Habitable-zone super-Earth K2-3d Author: Akihiko Fukui, John Livingston, Norio Narita, Teruyuki Hirano, Masahiro Onitsuka, Tsuguru Ryu, Nobuhiko Kusakabe
We report the first ground-based transit observation of K2-3d, a 1.5 R_Earth planet supposedly within the habitable zone around a bright M-dwarf host star, using the Okayama 188-cm telescope and the multi(grz)-band imager MuSCAT. Although the depth of the transit (0.7 mmag) is smaller than the photometric precisions (1.2, 0.9, and 1.2 mmag per 60 s for g, r, and z bands, respectively), we marginally but consistently identify the transit signal in all three bands, by taking advantage of the transit parameters from K2, and by introducing a novel technique that leverages multi-band information to reduce the systematics caused by second-order extinction. We also revisit previously analysed Spitzer transit observations of K2-3d to investigate the possibility of systematic offsets in transit timing, and find that all the timing data can be explained well by a linear ephemeris. We revise the orbital period of K2-3d to be 44.55612 \pm 0.00021 days, which corrects the predicted transit times in 2019, i.e., the JWST era, by \sim80 minutes. Our observation demonstrates that (1) even ground-based, 2-m class telescopes can play an important role in refining the transit ephemeris of small-sized, long-period planets, and that (2) a multi-band imager is useful to reduce the systematics of atmospheric origin, in particular for bluer bands and for observations conducted at low-altitude observatories.
K2-3d also known as EPIC 201367065 d is a high mass exoplanet orbiting K2-3 a red dwarf, every 44.5 days 137 ly away.[1][2] It has a density of 17.5±6.3g/cm3 far greater than that of Iron Indicating that it has a solid surface simular of that of a terrestrial planet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K2-3d
This is one of the newer really exciting extrasolar planets that kepler has discovered. As you can see this planet has 1.53 earth radi with 11.1 times our mass ending up being around 17 g/cm^3 in density or nearly as dense as iron!