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OGLE-2018-BLG-1700L: Microlensing Planet in Binary Stellar System

Authors :
Igor Soszyński
Patryk Iwanek
Cheongho Han
Shota Miyazaki
Nicholas J. Rattenbury
Jan Skowron
In-Gu Shin
David P. Bennett
Hirosane Fujii
Yoshitaka Itow
Byeong-Gon Park
Andrew Gould
Clément Ranc
Daisuke Suzuki
Haruno Suematsu
Weicheng Zang
Masayuki Nagakane
Kyu-Ha Hwang
Paul J. Tristram
Takahiro Sumi
Radek Poleski
Ian A. Bond
Martin Donachie
Sang-Mok Cha
Denis J. Sullivan
Iona Kondo
Man Cheung Alex Li
M. James Jee
Dong-Joo Lee
Chung-Uk Lee
Akihiko Fukui
Andrzej Udalski
Michał K. Szymański
Doeon Kim
Jennifer C. Yee
Yuki Hirao
Przemek Mróz
Yossi Shvartzvald
Fumio Abe
Michael D. Albrow
Sun-Ju Chung
Richard W. Pogge
Yutaka Matsubara
Yuhei Kamei
Krzysztof Ulaczyk
Szymon Kozłowski
Youn Kil Jung
Dong-Jin Kim
Yoon-Hyun Ryu
Richard K. Barry
M. Wrona
Aparna Bhattacharya
Hyoun-Woo Kim
Krzysztof A. Rybicki
Yasushi Muraki
Yongseok Lee
Atsunori Yonehara
T. Yamakawa
Paweł Pietrukowicz
Seung-Lee Kim
Naoki Koshimoto
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We report the discovery of a planet in a binary that was discovered from the analysis of the microlensing event OGLE-2018-BLG-1700. We identify the triple nature of the lens from the fact that the complex anomaly pattern can be decomposed into two parts produced by two binary-lens events, in which one binary pair has a very low mass ratio of $\sim 0.01$ between the lens components and the other pair has a mass ratio of $\sim 0.3$. We find two sets of degenerate solutions, in which one solution has a projected separation between the primary and its stellar companion less than the angular Einstein radius $\thetae$ (close solution), while the other solution has a separation greater than $\thetae$ (wide solution). From the Bayesian analysis with the constraints of the event time scale and angular Einstein radius together with the location of the source lying in the far disk behind the bulge, we find that the planet is a super-Jupiter with a mass of $4.4^{+3.0}_{-2.0}~M_{\rm J}$ and the stellar binary components are early and late M-type dwarfs with masses $0.42^{+0.29}_{-0.19}~M_\odot$ and $0.12^{+0.08}_{-0.05}~M_\odot$, respectively, and the planetary system is located at a distance of $D_{\rm L}=7.6^{+1.2}_{-0.9}~{\rm kpc}$. The planet is a circumstellar planet according to the wide solution, while it is a circumbinary planet according to the close solution. The projected primary-planet separation is $2.8^{+3.2}_{-2.5}~{\rm au}$ commonly for the close and wide solutions, but the primary-secondary binary separation of the close solution, $0.75^{+0.87}_{-0.66}~{\rm au}$, is widely different from the separation, $10.5^{+12.1}_{-9.2}~{\rm au}$, of the wide solution.<br />10 pages, 8 figures

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....16c95774369daa3c94dc92349dc51af6