OGLE-2017-BLG-0406: Spitzer Microlens Parallax Reveals Saturn-mass Planet Orbiting M-dwarf Host in the Inner Galactic Disk

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  • Yuki Hirao
  • David P. Bennett
  • Yoon-Hyun Ryu
  • Naoki Koshimoto
  • Andrzej Udalski
  • Jennifer C. Yee
  • Takahiro Sumi
  • Ian A. Bond
  • Yossi Shvartzvald
  • Fumio Abe
  • Richard K. Barry
  • Aparna Bhattacharya
  • Martin Donachie
  • Akihiko Fukui
  • Yoshitaka Itow
  • Iona Kondo
  • Man Cheung Alex Li
  • Yutaka Matsubara
  • Taro Matsuo
  • Shota Miyazaki
  • Yasushi Muraki
  • Masayuki Nagakane
  • Clement Ranc
  • Nicholas J. Rattenbury
  • Haruno Suematsu
  • Hiroshi Shibai
  • Daisuke Suzuki
  • Paul J. Tristram
  • Atsunori Yonehara
  • J. Skowron
  • R. Poleski
  • P. Mroz
  • M. K. Szymanski
  • I. Soszynski
  • S. Kozlowski
  • P. Pietrukowicz
  • K. Ulaczyk
  • K. Rybicki
  • P. Iwanek
  • Michael D. Albrow
  • Sun-Ju Chung
  • Andrew Gould
  • Cheongho Han
  • Kyu-Ha Hwang
  • Youn Kil Jung
  • In-Gu Shin
  • Markus Hundertmark
  • Jørgensen, Uffe Gråe
  • J. Skottfelt
  • Y. I. Fujii
  • MOA Collaboration
  • OGLE Collaboration
  • KMTNet Collaboration
  • Spitzer Team
  • LCO Fun Follow-up Teams
  • MiNDSTEp Collaboration
  • IRSF Team

We report the discovery and analysis of the planetary microlensing event OGLE-2017-BLG-0406, which was observed both from the ground and by the Spitzer satellite in a solar orbit. At high magnification, the anomaly in the light curve was densely observed by ground-based-survey and follow-up groups, and it was found to be explained by a planetary lens with a planet/host mass ratio of q = 7.0 x 10(-4) from the light-curve modeling. The ground-only and Spitzer-"only" data each provide very strong one-dimensional (1D) constraints on the 2D microlens parallax vector pi(E). When combined, these yield a precise measurement of pi(E) and of the masses of the host M-host = 0.56 +/- 0.07 M-circle dot and planet M-planet = 0.41 +/- 0.05 M-Jup. The system lies at a distance D-L = 5.2 +/- 0.5 kpc from the Sun toward the Galactic bulge, and the host is more likely to be a disk population star according to the kinematics of the lens. The projected separation of the planet from the host is a(perpendicular to) = 3.5 +/- 0.3 au (i.e., just over twice the snow line). The Galactic-disk kinematics are established in part from a precise measurement of the source proper motion based on OGLE-IV data. By contrast, the Gaia proper-motion measurement of the source suffers from a catastrophic 10 sigma error.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer74
TidsskriftAstronomical Journal
Vol/bind160
Udgave nummer2
Antal sider20
ISSN0004-6256
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 1 aug. 2020

ID: 251357754