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OGLE-2017-BLG-0448Lb: A Low Mass-Ratio Wide-Orbit Microlensing Planet?

Authors :
Zhai, Ruocheng
Poleski, Radosław
Zang, Weicheng
Jung, Youn Kil
Udalski, Andrzej
Kuang, Renkun
Albrow, Michael D.
Chung, Sun-Ju
Gould, Andrew
Han, Cheongho
Hwang, Kyu-Ha
Ryu, Yoon-Hyun
Shin, In-Gu
Shvartzvald, Yossi
Yang, Hongjing
Yee, Jennifer C.
Cha, Sang-Mok
Kim, Dong-Jin
Kim, Hyoun-Woo
Kim, Seung-Lee
Lee, Chung-Uk
Lee, Dong-Joo
Lee, Yongseok
Park, Byeong-Gon
Pogge, Richard W.
Skowron, Jan
Szymański, Michał K.
Soszyński, Igor
Ulaczyk, Krzysztof
Pietrukowicz, Paweł
Kozłowski, Szymon
Mróz, Przemek
Rybicki, Krzysztof A.
Iwanek, Patryk
Wrona, Marcin
Gromadzki, Mariusz
Wang, Hanyue
Mao, Shude
Zhang, Jiyuan
Qian, Qiyue
Zhu, Wei
Zhai, Ruocheng
Poleski, Radosław
Zang, Weicheng
Jung, Youn Kil
Udalski, Andrzej
Kuang, Renkun
Albrow, Michael D.
Chung, Sun-Ju
Gould, Andrew
Han, Cheongho
Hwang, Kyu-Ha
Ryu, Yoon-Hyun
Shin, In-Gu
Shvartzvald, Yossi
Yang, Hongjing
Yee, Jennifer C.
Cha, Sang-Mok
Kim, Dong-Jin
Kim, Hyoun-Woo
Kim, Seung-Lee
Lee, Chung-Uk
Lee, Dong-Joo
Lee, Yongseok
Park, Byeong-Gon
Pogge, Richard W.
Skowron, Jan
Szymański, Michał K.
Soszyński, Igor
Ulaczyk, Krzysztof
Pietrukowicz, Paweł
Kozłowski, Szymon
Mróz, Przemek
Rybicki, Krzysztof A.
Iwanek, Patryk
Wrona, Marcin
Gromadzki, Mariusz
Wang, Hanyue
Mao, Shude
Zhang, Jiyuan
Qian, Qiyue
Zhu, Wei
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The gravitational microlensing technique is most sensitive to planets in a Jupiter-like orbit and has detected more than 200 planets. However, only a few wide-orbit ($s > 2$) microlensing planets have been discovered, where $s$ is the planet-to-host separation normalized to the angular Einstein ring radius, $\theta_{\rm E}$. Here we present the discovery and analysis of a strong candidate wide-orbit microlensing planet in the event, OGLE-2017-BLG-0448. The whole light curve exhibits long-term residuals to the static binary-lens single-source model, so we investigate the residuals by adding the microlensing parallax, microlensing xallarap, an additional lens, or an additional source. For the first time, we observe a complex degeneracy between all four effects. The wide-orbit models with $s \sim 2.5$ and a planet-to-host mass-ratio of $q \sim 10^{-4}$ are significantly preferred, but we cannot rule out the close models with $s \sim 0.35$ and $q \sim 10^{-3}$. A Bayesian analysis based on a Galactic model indicates that, despite the complicated degeneracy, the surviving wide-orbit models all contain a super-Earth-mass to Neptune-mass planet at a projected planet-host separation of $\sim 6$ au and the surviving close-orbit models all consist of a Jovian-mass planet at $\sim 1$ au. The host star is probably an M or K dwarf. We discuss the implications of this dimension-degeneracy disaster on microlensing light-curve analysis and its potential impact on statistical studies.<br />Comment: submitted to AJ

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1430703959
Document Type :
Electronic Resource