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OGLE-2016-BLG-1195Lb: A Sub-Neptune Beyond the Snow Line of an M-dwarf Confirmed by Keck AO

Authors :
Vandorou, Aikaterini
Dang, Lisa
Bennett, David P.
Koshimoto, Naoki
Terry, Sean K.
Beaulieu, Jean-Phillipe
Alard, Christophe
Bhattacharya, Aparna
Blackman, Joshua W.
Bouchoutrouch-Ku, Tarik
Cole, Andrew A.
Cowan, Nicolas B.
Marquette, Jean-Baptiste
Ranc, Clément
Rektsini, Natalia
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present the analysis of high resolution follow-up observations of OGLE-2016-BLG-1195 using Keck, four years after the event's peak. We find the lens system to be at $D_L = 6.87\pm 0.65$ kpc and comprised of a $M_{\rm p} = 9.91\pm 1.61\ M_{\rm Earth}$ planet, orbiting an M-dwarf, $M_{\rm L} = 0.57\pm 0.06\ M_{\odot}$, beyond the snow line, with a projected separation of $r_\perp=2.62\pm 0.28$ AU. Our results are consistent with the discovery paper, which reports values with 1-sigma uncertainties based on a single mass-distance constraint from finite source effects. However, both the discovery paper and our follow-up results disagree with the analysis of a different group that also present the planetary signal detection. The latter utilizes Spitzer photometry to measure a parallax signal. Combined with finite source effects, they claim to measure the mass and distance of the system to much greater accuracy, suggesting that it is composed of an Earth-mass planet orbiting an ultracool dwarf. Their parallax signal though is improbable since it suggests a lens star in the disk moving perpendicular to disk rotation. Moreover, parallaxes are known to be affected by systematic errors in the photometry. Therefore, we reanalyze the Spitzer photometry for this event and conclude that the parallax signal is not significantly greater than the instrumental noise, and is likely affected by systematic errors in the photometric data. The results of this paper act as a cautionary tale that conclusions of analyses that rely heavily on low signal-to-noise Spitzer photometric data, can be misleading.<br />Comment: Submitted to AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2302.01168
Document Type :
Working Paper