Confirmation of an exoplanet using the transit color signature: Kepler-418b, a blended giant planet in a multiplanet system
B. Tingley, H. Parviainen, D. Gandolfi, H. J. Deeg, E. Pall\'e, P., Monta\~n\'es Rodriguez, F. Murgas, R. Alonso, H. Bruntt, and M. Fridlund

TL;DR
This paper confirms Kepler-418b as a giant exoplanet primarily using the transit color signature technique, demonstrating its effectiveness from ground-based observations and revealing additional stellar contamination affecting radius estimates.
Contribution
First ground-based confirmation of an exoplanet using transit color signatures, highlighting its utility for long-period planets and stellar contamination detection.
Findings
Transit color signature confirms planetary nature.
Detected significant light contamination affecting radius measurement.
Validated the technique as a viable ground-based confirmation method.
Abstract
We announce confirmation of Kepler-418b, one of two proposed planets in this system. This is the first confirmation of an exoplanet based primarily on the transit color signature technique. We used the Kepler public data archive combined with multicolor photometry from the Gran Telescopio de Canarias and radial velocity follow-up using FIES at the Nordic Optical Telescope for confirmation. We report a confident detection of a transit color signature that can only be explained by a compact occulting body, entirely ruling out a contaminating eclipsing binary, a hierarchical triple, or a grazing eclipsing binary. Those findings are corroborated by our radial velocity measurements, which put an upper limit of ~1 Mjup on the mass of Kepler-418b. We also report that the host star is significantly blended, confirming the ~10% light contamination suspected from the crowding metric in the Kepler…
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