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New giant planet beyond the snow line for an extended MOA exoplanet microlens sample

Autor
Ranc, Clément
Bennett, David P.
Barry, Richard K.
Koshimoto, Naoki
Skowron, Jan
Hirao, Yuki
Bond, Ian A.
Sumi, Takahiro
Bathe-Peters, Lars
Abe, Fumio
Data publikacji
2021
Abstrakt (EN)

Characterizing a planet detected by microlensing is hard if the planetary signal is weak or the lens-source relative trajectory is far from caustics. However, statistical analyses of planet demography must include those planets to accurately determine occurrence rates. As part of a systematic modelling effort in the context of a >10-yr retrospective analysis of MOA's survey observations to build an extended MOA statistical sample, we analyse the light curve of the planetary microlensing event MOA-2014-BLG-472. This event provides weak constraints on the physical parameters of the lens, as a result of a planetary anomaly occurring at low magnification in the light curve. We use a Bayesian analysis to estimate the properties of the planet, based on a refined Galactic model and the assumption that all Milky Way's stars have an equal planet-hosting probability. We find that a lens consisting of a $1.9^{+2.2}_{-1.2}\, \mathrm{M}_\mathrm{J}$ giant planet orbiting a $0.31^{+0.36}_{-0.19}\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$ host at a projected separation of $0.75\pm 0.24\, \mathrm{au}$ is consistent with the observations and is most likely, based on the Galactic priors. The lens most probably lies in the Galactic bulge, at $7.2^{+0.6}_{-1.7}\,\mathrm{kpc}$ from Earth. The accurate measurement of the measured planet-to-host star mass ratio will be included in the next statistical analysis of cold planet demography detected by microlensing.

Dyscyplina PBN
astronomia
Czasopismo
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Tom
506
Zeszyt
1
Strony od-do
1498-1506
ISSN
0035-8711
Data udostępnienia w otwartym dostępie
2021-07-07
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Inna