New Giant Planet beyond the Snow Line for an Extended MOA Exoplanet Microlens Sample
Characterizing a planet detected by microlensing is hard if the planetary signal is weak or the lens-source relative trajectory is far from caustics. However, statistical analyses of planet demography must include those planets to accurately determine occurrence rates. As part of a systematic modeli...
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Veröffentlicht in: | arXiv.org 2021-07 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Characterizing a planet detected by microlensing is hard if the planetary signal is weak or the lens-source relative trajectory is far from caustics. However, statistical analyses of planet demography must include those planets to accurately determine occurrence rates. As part of a systematic modeling effort in the context of a \(>10\)-year retrospective analysis of MOA's survey observations to build an extended MOA statistical sample, we analyze the light curve of the planetary microlensing event MOA-2014-BLG-472. This event provides weak constraints on the physical parameters of the lens, as a result of a planetary anomaly occurring at low magnification in the light curve. We use a Bayesian analysis to estimate the properties of the planet, based on a refined Galactic model and the assumption that all Milky Way's stars have an equal planet-hosting probability. We find that a lens consisting of a \(1.9^{+2.2}_{-1.2}\,\mathrm{M}_\mathrm{J}\) giant planet orbiting a \(0.31^{+0.36}_{-0.19}\,\mathrm{M}_\odot\) host at a projected separation of \(0.75\pm0.24\,\mathrm{au}\) is consistent with the observations and is most likely, based on the Galactic priors. The lens most probably lies in the Galactic bulge, at \(7.2^{+0.6}_{-1.7}\mathrm{kpc}\) from Earth. The accurate measurement of the measured planet-to-host star mass ratio will be included in the next statistical analysis of cold planet demography detected by microlensing. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2107.03400 |