OGLE-2014-BLG-0962 and the First Statistical Validation of Bayesian Priors for Galactic Microlensing
OGLE-2014-BLG-0962 (OB140962) is a stellar binary microlensing event that was well-covered by observations from the Spitzer satellite as well as ground-based surveys. Modelling yields a unique physical solution: a mid-M+M-dwarf binary with \(M_{\rm prim} = 0.20 \pm 0.01 M_\odot\) and \(M_{\rm sec} =...
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Veröffentlicht in: | arXiv.org 2018-05 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | OGLE-2014-BLG-0962 (OB140962) is a stellar binary microlensing event that was well-covered by observations from the Spitzer satellite as well as ground-based surveys. Modelling yields a unique physical solution: a mid-M+M-dwarf binary with \(M_{\rm prim} = 0.20 \pm 0.01 M_\odot\) and \(M_{\rm sec} = 0.16 \pm 0.01 M_\odot\), with projected separation of \(2.0 \pm 0.3\) AU. The lens is only \(D_{\rm LS} = 0.41 \pm 0.06\) kpc in front of the source, making OB140962 a bulge lens and the most distant Spitzer binary lens to date. In contrast, because the Einstein radius (\(\theta_{\rm E} = 0.143 \pm 0.007\) mas) is unusually small, a standard Bayesian analysis, conducted in the absence of parallax information, would predict a brown dwarf binary. We test the accuracy of Bayesian analysis over a set of Spitzer lenses, finding overall good agreement throughout the sample. We also illustrate the methodology for probing the Galactic distribution of planets by comparing the cumulative distance distribution of the Spitzer 2-body lenses to that of the Spitzer single lenses. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |