Spitzer$ Microlensing Parallax for OGLE-2017-BLG-0896 Reveals a Counter-Rotating Low-Mass Brown Dwarf
The kinematics of isolated brown dwarfs in the Galaxy, beyond the solar neighborhood, is virtually unknown. Microlensing has the potential to probe this hidden population, as it can measure both the mass and five of the six phase-space coordinates (all except the radial velocity) even of a dark isol...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The kinematics of isolated brown dwarfs in the Galaxy, beyond the solar
neighborhood, is virtually unknown. Microlensing has the potential to probe
this hidden population, as it can measure both the mass and five of the six
phase-space coordinates (all except the radial velocity) even of a dark
isolated lens. However, the measurements of both the microlens parallax and
finite-source effects are needed in order to recover the full information.
Here, we combine $Spitzer$ satellite parallax measurement with the ground-based
light curve, which exhibits strong finite-source effects, of event
OGLE-2017-BLG-0896. We find two degenerate solutions for the lens (due to the
known satellite-parallax degeneracy), which are consistent with each other
except for their proper motion. The lens is an isolated brown dwarf with a mass
of either $18\pm1M_J$ or $20\pm1M_J$. This is the lowest isolated-object mass
measurement to date, only $\sim$45\% more massive than the theoretical
deuterium-fusion boundary at solar metallicity, which is the common definition
of a free-floating planet. The brown dwarf is located at either $3.9\pm0.1$ kpc
or $4.1\pm0.1$ kpc toward the Galactic bulge, but with proper motion in the
opposite direction of disk stars, with one solution suggesting it is moving
within the Galactic plane. While it is possibly a halo brown dwarf, it might
also represent a different, unknown population. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1805.08778 |