Millimagnitude Photometry for Transiting Extrasolar Planetary Candidates IV: The Puzzle of the Extremely Red OGLE-TR-82 Primary Solved
Sergio Hoyer, Sebastian Ramirez Alegria, Valentin D. Ivanov, Dante, Minniti, Grzegorz Pietrzynski, Maria Teresa Ruiz, Wolfgang Gieren, Andrzej, Udalski, Manuela Zoccali, Rodrigo Carrasco, Rodrigo F. Diaz, Jose Miguel, Fernandez, Jose Gallardo, Marina Rejkuba, Felipe Perez

TL;DR
This study provides detailed photometry and analysis of OGLE-TR-82, revealing it is a blended system with a background red giant, thus not hosting a planet, and clarifies the nature of this extremely red transit candidate.
Contribution
The paper presents comprehensive multi-band photometry and spectroscopy that conclusively identifies OGLE-TR-82 as a blended system with a background red giant, ruling out a planetary companion.
Findings
OGLE-TR-82 is a distant, reddened K giant, not a planet host.
The transit signal is caused by a binary system blending with a background star.
The companion is a main-sequence star, not a planet.
Abstract
We present precise new V, I, and K-band photometry for the planetary transit candidate star OGLE-TR-82. Good seeing V-band images acquired with VIMOS instrument at ESO VLT allowed us to measure V=20.6+-0.03 mag star in spite of the presence of a brighter neighbour about 1" away. This faint magnitude answers the question why it has not been possible to measure radial velocities for this object. One transit of this star has been observed with GMOS-S instrument of GEMINI-South telescope in i and g-bands. The measurement of the transit allows us to verify that this is not a false positive, to confirm the transit amplitude measured by OGLE, and to improve the ephemeris. The transit is well defined in i-band light curve, with a depth of A_i=0.034 mag. It is however, less well defined, but deeper (A_g=0.1 mag) in the g-band, in which the star is significantly fainter. The near-infrared…
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