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Journal Articles The Astronomical Journal Year : 2018

A Planetary Microlensing Event with an Unusually Red Source Star: MOA-2011-BLG-291

David P. Bennett
  • Function : Author
Andrzej Udalski
  • Function : Author
Ian A. Bond
  • Function : Author
Daisuke Suzuki
  • Function : Author
Yoon-Hyun Ryu
  • Function : Author
Fumio Abe
  • Function : Author
Richard K. Barry
  • Function : Author
Aparna Bhattacharya
  • Function : Author
Martin Donachie
  • Function : Author
Akihiko Fukui
  • Function : Author
Yuki Hirao
  • Function : Author
Kohei Kawasaki
  • Function : Author
Iona Kondo
  • Function : Author
Naoki Koshimoto
  • Function : Author
Man Cheung Alex Li
  • Function : Author
Yutaka Matsubara
  • Function : Author
Shota Miyazaki
  • Function : Author
Yasushi Muraki
  • Function : Author
Masayuki Nagakane
  • Function : Author
Koji Ohnishi
  • Function : Author
Clément Ranc
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1181264
  • IdHAL : cr
Nicholas J. Rattenbury
  • Function : Author
Haruno Suematsu
  • Function : Author
Takahiro Sumi
  • Function : Author
Paul J. Tristram
  • Function : Author
Atsunori Yonehara
  • Function : Author
Michał K. Szymański
  • Function : Author
Igor Soszyński
  • Function : Author
Łukasz Wyrzykowski
  • Function : Author
Krzysztof Ulaczyk
  • Function : Author
Radek Poleski
  • Function : Author
Szymon Kozłowski
  • Function : Author
Paweł Pietrukowicz
  • Function : Author
Jan Skowron
  • Function : Author
Yossi Shvartzvald
  • Function : Author
Dan Maoz
  • Function : Author
Shai Kaspi
  • Function : Author
Matan Friedmann
  • Function : Author
Darren Depoy
  • Function : Author
Subo Dong
  • Function : Author
B. Scott Gaudi
  • Function : Author
Andrew Gould
  • Function : Author
Cheongho Han
  • Function : Author
Richard W. Pogge
  • Function : Author
Thiam-Guan Tan
  • Function : Author
Jennifer C. Yee
  • Function : Author

Abstract

We present the analysis of the planetary microlensing event MOA-2011-BLG-291, which has a mass ratio of q = (3.8 ± 0.7) × 10-4 and a source star that is redder (or brighter) than the bulge main sequence. This event is located at a low Galactic latitude in the survey area that is currently planned for NASA’s Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) exoplanet microlensing survey. This unusual color for a microlensed source star implies that we cannot assume that the source star is in the Galactic bulge. The favored interpretation is that the source star is a lower main-sequence star at a distance of D S = 4.9 ± 1.3 kpc in the Galactic disk. However, the source could also be a turn-off star on the far side of the bulge or a subgiant in the far side of the Galactic disk if it experiences significantly more reddening than the bulge red clump stars. However, these possibilities have only a small effect on our mass estimates for the host star and planet. We find host star and planet masses of {M}host}={0.15}-0.10+0.27 {M} and {m}p={18}-12+34 {M}\oplus from a Bayesian analysis with a standard Galactic model, under the assumption that the planet hosting probability does not depend on the host mass or distance. However, if we attempt to measure the host and planet masses with host star brightness measurements from high angular resolution follow-up imaging, the implied masses will be sensitive to the host star distance. The WFIRST exoplanet microlensing survey is expected to use this method to determine the masses for many of the planetary systems that it discovers, so this issue has important design implications for the WFIRST exoplanet microlensing survey.

Dates and versions

insu-03747682 , version 1 (08-08-2022)

Identifiers

Cite

David P. Bennett, Andrzej Udalski, Ian A. Bond, Daisuke Suzuki, Yoon-Hyun Ryu, et al.. A Planetary Microlensing Event with an Unusually Red Source Star: MOA-2011-BLG-291. The Astronomical Journal, 2018, 156, ⟨10.3847/1538-3881/aad59c⟩. ⟨insu-03747682⟩
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