1,041 results on '"Furusawa, K."'
Search Results
2. Maintenance Algorithms for 0-Complete Trees with Improved Space Utilization
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Dai, H. K., Furusawa, K., Filipe, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Ghosh, Ashish, Editorial Board Member, Prates, Raquel Oliveira, Editorial Board Member, Zhou, Lizhu, Editorial Board Member, Dang, Tran Khanh, editor, Küng, Josef, editor, and Chung, Tai M., editor
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- 2023
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3. Improving the Storage Utilization of 0-Complete Trees as Index Structures
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Dai, H. K., Furusawa, K., Filipe, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Ghosh, Ashish, Editorial Board Member, Prates, Raquel Oliveira, Editorial Board Member, Zhou, Lizhu, Editorial Board Member, Dang, Tran Khanh, editor, Küng, Josef, editor, and Chung, Tai M., editor
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- 2022
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4. Improving the Storage Utilization of 0-Complete Trees as Index Structures
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Dai, H. K., primary and Furusawa, K., additional
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- 2022
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5. OGLE-2008-BLG-355Lb: A Massive Planet around A Late type Star
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Koshimoto, N., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Rattenbury, N., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Freeman, M., Fukagawa, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Saito, To., Shibai, H., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, K., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Takino, S., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Soszyński, I, Pietrzyński, G., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., and Wyrzykowski, Ł.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a massive planet OGLE-2008-BLG-355Lb. The light curve analysis indicates a planet:host mass ratio of q = 0.0118 +/- 0.0006 at a separation of 0.877 +/- 0.010 Einstein radii. We do not measure a significant microlensing parallax signal and do not have high angular resolution images that could detect the planetary host star. Therefore, we do not have a direct measurement of the host star mass. A Bayesian analysis, assuming that all host stars have equal probability to host a planet with the measured mass ratio implies a host star mass of M_h = 0.37_{-0.17}^{+0.30} M_Sun and a companion of mass M_P = 4.6^{+3.7}_{-2.2} M_Jup, at a projected separation of r_proj = 1.70^{+0.29}_{-0.30} AU. The implied distance to the planetary system is D_L = 6.8 +/- 1.1 kpc. A planetary system with the properties preferred by the Bayesian analysis would be a challenge to the core-accretion model of planet formation, as the core-accretion model predicts that massive planets are far more likely to form around more massive host stars. This core accretion model prediction is not consistent with our Bayesian prior of an equal probability of host stars of all masses to host a planet with the measured mass ratio. So, if the core accretion model prediction is right, we should expect that follow-up high angular resolution observations will detect a host star with a mass in the upper part of the range allowed by the Bayesian analysis. That is, the host would probably be a K or G dwarf., Comment: 42 pages, 12 figures, submitted for publication in ApJ
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- 2014
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6. MOA-2008-BLG-379Lb: A Massive Planet from a High Magnification Event with a Faint Source
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Suzuki, D., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Freeman, M., Fukagawa, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Shibai, H., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, K., Sweatman, W. L., Takino, S., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Soszyński, I., Pietrzyński, G., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., and Wyrzykowski, Ł.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report analysis of high microlensing event MOA-2008-BLG-379, which has a strong microlensing anomaly at its peak, due to a massive planet with a mass ratio of q = 6.9 x 10^{-3}. Because the faint source star crosses the large resonant caustic, the planetary signal dominates the light curve. This is unusual for planetary microlensing events, and as a result, the planetary nature of this light curve was not immediately noticed. The planetary nature of the event was found when the MOA Collaboration conducted a systematic study of binary microlensing events previously identified by the MOA alert system. We have conducted a Bayesian analysis based on a standard Galactic model to estimate the physical parameters of the lens system. This yields a host star mass of M_L = 0.66_{-0.33}^{+0.29} M_Sun orbited by a planet of mass m_P = 4.8_{-2.4}^{+2.1} M_Jup at an orbital separation of a = 4.1_{-1.5}^{+1.9} AU at a distance of D_L = 3.6 +/- 1.3 kpc. The faint source magnitude of I_S = 21.30 and relatively high lens-source relative proper motion of mu_rel = 7.6 +/- 1.6 mas/yr implies that high angular resolution adaptive optics or Hubble Space Telescope observations are likely to be able to detect the source star, which would determine the masses and distance of the planet and its host star., Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2013
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7. MOA-2010-BLG-328Lb: a sub-Neptune orbiting very late M dwarf ?
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Furusawa, K., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Gould, A., Jorgensen, U. G., Snodgrass, C., Prester, D. Dominis, Albrow, M. D., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Harris, P., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymanski, M. K., Soszynski, I., Kubiak, M., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrzynski, G., Wyrzykowski, L., Choi, J. Y., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Dong, S., Drummond, J., Gaudi, B. S., Han, C., Hung, L. -W., Jung, Y. -K., Lee, C. -U., McCormick, J., Moorhouse, D., Natusch, T., Nola, M., Ofek, E., Park, B. G., Park, H., Pogge, R. W., Shin, I. -G., Skowron, J., Thornley, G., Yee, J. C., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dominik, M., Finet, F., Gerner, T., Hardis, S., Harpsoe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Schafer, S., Schonebeck, F., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Wambsganss, J., Street, R. A., Bramich, D. M., Steele, I. A., Tsapras, Y., Horne, K., Donatowicz, J., Sahu, K. C., Bachelet, E., Batista, V., Beatty, T. G., Beaulieu, J. -P., Bennett, C. S., Black, C., Bowens-Rubin, R., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A. A., Corrales, E., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Fouque, P., Greenhill, J., Henderson, C. B., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Menzies, J. W., Shappee, B., Williams, A., Wouters, D., van Saders, J., Zellem, R., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze the planetary microlensing event MOA-2010-BLG-328. The best fit yields host and planetary masses of Mh = 0.11+/-0.01 M_{sun} and Mp = 9.2+/-2.2M_Earth, corresponding to a very late M dwarf and sub-Neptune-mass planet, respectively. The system lies at DL = 0.81 +/- 0.10 kpc with projected separation r = 0.92 +/- 0.16 AU. Because of the host's a-priori-unlikely close distance, as well as the unusual nature of the system, we consider the possibility that the microlens parallax signal, which determines the host mass and distance, is actually due to xallarap (source orbital motion) that is being misinterpreted as parallax. We show a result that favors the parallax solution, even given its close host distance. We show that future high-resolution astrometric measurements could decisively resolve the remaining ambiguity of these solutions., Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures. accepted for publication in ApJ. Figure 1 and 2 are updated
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- 2013
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8. Microlensing Discovery of a Tight, Low Mass-ratio Planetary-mass Object around an Old, Field Brown Dwarf
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Han, C., Jung, Y. K., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Gaudi, B. S., Gould, A., Bennett, D. P., Tsapras, Y., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzyński, G., Soszyński, I., Skowron, J., Kozłowski, S., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Pietrukowicz, P., Abe, F., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Harris, P., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Suzuki, D., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Batista, V., Christie, G., Choi, J. -Y., DePoy, D. L., Dong, Subo, Hwang, K. -H., Kavka, A., Lee, C. -U., Monard, L. A. G., Natusch, T., Ngan, H., Park, H., Pogge, R. W., Porritt, I., Shin, I. -G., Tan, T. G., Yee, J. C., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Bramich, D. M., Browne, P., Dominik, M., Horne, K., Hundertmark, M., Ipatov, S., Kains, N., Liebig, C., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I. A., and Street, R. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of accretion disks around young brown dwarfs have led to the speculation that they may form planetary systems similar to normal stars. While there have been several detections of planetary-mass objects around brown dwarfs (2MASS 1207-3932 and 2MASS 0441-2301), these companions have relatively large mass ratios and projected separations, suggesting that they formed in a manner analogous to stellar binaries. We present the discovery of a planetary-mass object orbiting a field brown dwarf via gravitational microlensing, OGLE-2012-BLG-0358Lb. The system is a low secondary/primary mass ratio (0.080 +- 0.001), relatively tightly-separated (~0.87 AU) binary composed of a planetary-mass object with 1.9 +- 0.2 Jupiter masses orbiting a brown dwarf with a mass 0.022 M_Sun. The relatively small mass ratio and separation suggest that the companion may have formed in a protoplanetary disk around the brown dwarf host, in a manner analogous to planets., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables, Submitted in ApJ
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- 2013
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9. The Microlensing Event Rate and Optical Depth Toward the Galactic Bulge from MOA-II
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Sumi, T., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, J., Wada, K., and Yock, P. C. M.
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Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present measurements of the microlensing optical depth and event rate toward the Galactic Bulge based on two years of the MOA-II survey. This sample contains ~1000 microlensing events, with an Einstein Radius crossing time of t_E < 200 days between -5
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- 2013
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10. A Giant Planet beyond the Snow Line in Microlensing Event OGLE-2011-BLG-0251
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Kains, N., Street, R., Choi, J. -Y., Han, C., Udalski, A., Almeida, L. A., Jablonski, F., Tristram, P., Jorgensen, U. G., Szymanski, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Poleski, R., Kozlowski, S., Pietrukowicz, P., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, L., Skowron, J., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dominik, M., Dreizler, S., Fang, X. -S., Grundahl, F., Gu, C. -H., Hardis, S., Harpsoe, K., Hessman, F. V., Hinse, T. C., Hornstrup, A., Hundertmark, M., Jessen-Hansen, J., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Lund, M., Lundkvist, M., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Sahu, K. C., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Snodgrass, C., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Tregloan-Reed, J., Wambsganss, J., Wertz, O., Bajek, D., Bramich, D. M., Horne, K., Ipatov, S., Steele, I. A., Tsapras, Y., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N., Saito, T., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Suzuki, K., Sweatman, W. L., Takino, S., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Allen, W., Batista, V., Chung, S. -J., Christie, G., DePoy, D. L., Drummond, J., Gaudi, B. S., Gould, A., Henderson, C., Jung, Y. -K., Koo, J. -R., Lee, C. -U., McCormick, J., McGregor, D., Munoz, J. A., Natusch, T., Ngan, H., Park, H., Pogge, R. W., Shin, I. -G., Yee, J., Albrow, M. D., Bachelet, E., Beaulieu, J. -P., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Corrales, E., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouque, P., Greenhill, J., Kane, S. R., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Meintjes, P., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Williams, A., Wouters, D., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of the gravitational microlensing event OGLE-2011-BLG-0251. This anomalous event was observed by several survey and follow-up collaborations conducting microlensing observations towards the Galactic Bulge. Based on detailed modelling of the observed light curve, we find that the lens is composed of two masses with a mass ratio q=1.9 x 10^-3. Thanks to our detection of higher-order effects on the light curve due to the Earth's orbital motion and the finite size of source, we are able to measure the mass and distance to the lens unambiguously. We find that the lens is made up of a planet of mass 0.53 +- 0.21,M_Jup orbiting an M dwarf host star with a mass of 0.26 +- 0.11 M_Sun. The planetary system is located at a distance of 2.57 +- 0.61 kpc towards the Galactic Centre. The projected separation of the planet from its host star is d=1.408 +- 0.019, in units of the Einstein radius, which corresponds to 2.72 +- 0.75 AU in physical units. We also identified a competitive model with similar planet and host star masses, but with a smaller orbital radius of 1.50 +- 0.50 AU. The planet is therefore located beyond the snow line of its host star, which we estimate to be around 1-1.5 AU., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables; A&A in press
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- 2013
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11. Microlensing Discovery of a Population of Very Tight, Very Low-mass Binary Brown Dwarfs
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Choi, J. -Y., Han, C., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Gaudi, B. S., Gould, A., Bennett, D. P., Dominik, M., Beaulieu, J. -P., Tsapras, Y., Bozza, V., Abe, F., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, K., Sweatman, W. L., Suzuki, D., Takino, S., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzyński, G., Soszyński, I., Skowron, J., Kozłowski, S., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Pietrukowicz, P., Almeida, L. A., DePoy, D. L., Dong, Subo, Gorbikov, E., Jablonski, F., Henderson, C. B., Hwang, K. -H., Janczak, J., Jung, Y. -K., Kaspi, S., Lee, C. -U., Malamud, U., Maoz, D., McGregor, D., Munoz, J. A., Park, B. -G., Park, H., Pogge, R. W., Shvartzvald, Y., Shin, I. -G., Yee, J. C., Alsubai, K. A., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Fang, X. -S., Finet, F., Glitrup, M., Grundahl, F., Gu, S. -H., Hardis, S., Harpsøe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hornstrup, A., Hundertmark, M., Jessen-Hansen, J., Jørgensen, U. G., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Lund, M. N., Lundkvist, M., Maier, G., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Snodgrass, C., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Tregloan-Reed, J., Wambsganss, J., Wertz, O., Zimmer, F., Albrow, M. D., Bachelet, E., Batista, V., Brillant, S., Cassan, A., Cole, A. A., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouqué, P., Greenhill, J., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Menzies, J. W., Sahu, K. C., Zub, M., Bramich, D. M., Horne, K., Steele, I. A., and Street, R. A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Although many models have been proposed, the physical mechanisms responsible for the formation of low-mass brown dwarfs are poorly understood. The multiplicity properties and minimum mass of the brown-dwarf mass function provide critical empirical diagnostics of these mechanisms. We present the discovery via gravitational microlensing of two very low-mass, very tight binary systems. These binaries have directly and precisely measured total system masses of 0.025 Msun and 0.034 Msun, and projected separations of 0.31 AU and 0.19 AU, making them the lowest-mass and tightest field brown-dwarf binaries known. The discovery of a population of such binaries indicates that brown dwarf binaries can robustly form at least down to masses of ~0.02 Msun. Future microlensing surveys will measure a mass-selected sample of brown-dwarf binary systems, which can then be directly compared to similar samples of stellar binaries., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, ApJ submitted
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- 2013
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12. MOA-2010-BLG-073L: An M-Dwarf with a Substellar Companion at the Planet/Brown Dwarf Boundary
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Street, R. A., Choi, J. -Y., Tsapras, Y., Han, C., Furusawa, K., Hundertmark, M., Gould, A., Sumi, T., Bond, I. A., Wouters, D., Zellem, R., Udalski, A., Snodgrass, C., Horne, K., Dominik, M., Browne, P., Kains, N., Bramich, D. M., Bajek, D., Steele, I. A., Ipatov, S., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Harris, P., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagayama, T., Nishimaya, S., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymanski, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, L., Yee, J., Dong, S., Shin, I. -G., Lee, C. -U., Skowron, J., De Almeida, L. Andrade, DePoy, D. L., Gaudi, B. S., Hung, L. -W., Jablonski, F., Kaspi, S., Klein, N., Hwang, K. -H., Koo, J. -R., Maoz, D., Munoz, J. A., Pogge, R. W., Polishhook, D., Shporer, A., McCormick, J., Christie, G., Natusch, T., Allen, B., Drummond, J., Moorhouse, D., Thornley, G., Knowler, M., Bos, M., Bolt, G., Beaulieu, J. -P., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Corrales, E., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouque, P., Bachelet, E., Greenhill, J., Kane, S. R., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., Zub, M., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dreizler, S., Finet, F., Gerner, T., Hardis, S., Harpsoe, K., Hessman, F., Hinse, T. C., Jorgensen, U. G., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Schafer, S., Schonebeck, F., Southworth, J., and Surdej, J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of the anomalous microlensing event, MOA-2010-BLG-073, announced by the Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics survey on 2010-03-18. This event was remarkable because the source was previously known to be photometrically variable. Analyzing the pre-event source lightcurve, we demonstrate that it is an irregular variable over time scales >200d. Its dereddened color, $(V-I)_{S,0}$, is 1.221$\pm$0.051mag and from our lens model we derive a source radius of 14.7$\pm$1.3 $R_{\odot}$, suggesting that it is a red giant star. We initially explored a number of purely microlensing models for the event but found a residual gradient in the data taken prior to and after the event. This is likely to be due to the variability of the source rather than part of the lensing event, so we incorporated a slope parameter in our model in order to derive the true parameters of the lensing system. We find that the lensing system has a mass ratio of q=0.0654$\pm$0.0006. The Einstein crossing time of the event, $T_{\rm{E}}=44.3$\pm$0.1d, was sufficiently long that the lightcurve exhibited parallax effects. In addition, the source trajectory relative to the large caustic structure allowed the orbital motion of the lens system to be detected. Combining the parallax with the Einstein radius, we were able to derive the distance to the lens, $D_L$=2.8$\pm$0.4kpc, and the masses of the lensing objects. The primary of the lens is an M-dwarf with $M_{L,p}$=0.16$\pm0.03M_{\odot}$ while the companion has $M_{L,s}$=11.0$\pm2.0M_{\rm{J}}$ putting it in the boundary zone between planets and brown dwarfs., Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, best viewed in colour, accepted by ApJ
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- 2012
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13. MOA-2010-BLG-311: A planetary candidate below the threshold of reliable detection
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Yee, J. C., Hung, L. -W., Bond, I. A., Allen, W., Monard, L. A. G., Albrow, M. D., Fouque, P., Dominik, M., Tsapras, Y., Udalski, A., Gould, A., Zellem, R., Bos, M., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Dong, Subo, Drummond, J., Gaudi, B. S., Gorbikov, E., Han, C., Kaspi, S., Klein, N., Lee, C. -U., Maoz, D., McCormick, J., Moorhouse, D., Natusch, T., Nola, M., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Polishook, D., Shporer, A., Shvartzvald, Y., Skowron, J., Thornley, G., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Harris, P., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymanski, M. K., Soszynski, I., Kubiak, M., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrzynski, G., Wyrzykowski, L., Bachelet, E., Batista, V., Beatty, T. G., Beaulieu, J. -P., Bennett, C. S., Bowens-Rubin, R., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A. A., Corrales, E., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Greenhill, J., Henderson, C. B., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Menzies, J. W., Shappee, B., Williams, A., Wouters, D., van Saders, J., Zub, M., Street, R. A., Horne, K., Bramich, D. M., Steele, I. A., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Finet, F., Gerner, T., Hardis, S., Harpsoe, K., Hessman, F. V., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Jorgensen, U. G., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Sahu, K. C., Scarpetta, G., Schafer, S., Schonebeck, F., Snodgrass, C., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., and Wambsgans, J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze MOA-2010-BLG-311, a high magnification (A_max>600) microlensing event with complete data coverage over the peak, making it very sensitive to planetary signals. We fit this event with both a point lens and a 2-body lens model and find that the 2-body lens model is a better fit but with only Delta chi^2~80. The preferred mass ratio between the lens star and its companion is $q=10^(-3.7+/-0.1), placing the candidate companion in the planetary regime. Despite the formal significance of the planet, we show that because of systematics in the data the evidence for a planetary companion to the lens is too tenuous to claim a secure detection. When combined with analyses of other high-magnification events, this event helps empirically define the threshold for reliable planet detection in high-magnification events, which remains an open question., Comment: 29 pages, 6 Figures, 3 Tables. For a brief video presentation on this paper, please see http://www.youtube.com/user/OSUAstronomy 10/25/2012 - Updated author list. Replaced 10/10/13 to reflect the version published in ApJ
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- 2012
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14. MOA-2010-BLG-523: 'Failed Planet' = RS CVn Star
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Gould, A., Yee, J. C., Bond, I. A., Udalski, A., Han, C., Jorgensen, U. G., Greenhill, J., Tsapras, Y., Pinsonneault, M. H., Bensby, T., Allen, W., Almeida, L. A., Bos, M., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Dong, Subo, Gaudi, B. S., Hung, L. -W., Jablonski, F., Lee, C. -U., McCormick, J., Moorhouse, D., Munoz, J. A., Natusch, T., Nola, M., Pogge, R. W., Skowron, J., Thornley, G., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Harris, P., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymanski, M. K., Soszynski, I., Kubiak, M., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrzynski, G., Wyrzykowski, L., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dominik, M., Finet, F., Gerner, T., Hardis, S., Harpsoe, K., Hessman, F. V., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Sahu, K. C., Scarpetta, G., Schafer, S., Schonebeck, F., Snodgrass, C., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Wambsganss, J., Street, R. A., Horne, K., Bramich, D. M., Steele, I. A., Albrow, M. D., Bachelet, E., Batista, V., Beatty, T. G., Beaulieu, J. -P., Bennett, C. S., Bowens-Rubin, R., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A. A., Corrales, E., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouque, P., Henderson, C. B., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B, Martin, R., Menzies, J. W., Shappee, B., Williams, A., van Saders, J., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The Galactic bulge source MOA-2010-BLG-523S exhibited short-term deviations from a standard microlensing lightcurve near the peak of an Amax ~ 265 high-magnification microlensing event. The deviations originally seemed consistent with expectations for a planetary companion to the principal lens. We combine long-term photometric monitoring with a previously published high-resolution spectrum taken near peak to demonstrate that this is an RS CVn variable, so that planetary microlensing is not required to explain the lightcurve deviations. This is the first spectroscopically confirmed RS CVn star discovered in the Galactic bulge., Comment: 29 pp, 6 figs, submitted to ApJ
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- 2012
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15. Using Orbital Effects to Break the Close/wide Degeneracy in Binary-lens Microlensing Events
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Shin, I. -G., Sumi, T., Udalski, A., Choi, J. -Y., Han, C., Gould, A., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Harris, P., Itow, Y., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Soszyński, I., Pietrzyński, G., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrukowicz, P., Kozłowski, S., Skowron, J., and Wyrzykowski, Ł.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Microlensing can provide an important tool to study binaries, especially those composed of faint or dark objects. However, accurate analysis of binary-lens light curves is often hampered by the well-known degeneracy between close (s<1) and wide (s>1) binaries, which can be very severe due to an intrinsic symmetry in the lens equation. Here s is the normalized projected binary separation. In this paper, we propose a method that can resolve the close/wide degeneracy using the effect of a lens orbital motion on lensing light curves. The method is based on the fact that the orbital effect tends to be important for close binaries while it is negligible for wide binaries. We demonstrate the usefulness of the method by applying it to an actually observed binary-lens event MOA-2011-BLG-040/OGLE-2011-BLG-0001, which suffers from severe close/wide degeneracy. From this, we are able to uniquely specify that the lens is composed of K and M-type dwarfs located at ~3.5 kpc from the Earth., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables
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- 2012
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16. Microlensig Binaries with Candidate Brown Dwarf Companions
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Shin, I. -G., Han, C., Gould, A., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Dominik, M., Beaulieu, J. -P., Tsapras, Y., Bozza, V., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Soszyński, I., Pietrzyński, G., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrukowicz, P., Kozłowski, S., Skowron, J., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Kobara, S., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Omori, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Christie, G. W., Depoy, D. L., Dong, S., Gal-Yam, A., Gaudi, B. S., Hung, L. -W., Janczak, J., Kaspi, S., Maoz, D., McCormick, J., McGregor, D., Moorhouse, D., Muñoz, J. A., Natusch, T., Nelson, C., Pogge, R. W., Tan, T. -G., Polishook, D., Shvartzvald, Y., Shporer, A., Thornley, G., Malamud, U., Yee, J. C., Choi, J. -Y., Jung, Y. -K., Park, H., Lee, C. -U., Park, B. -G., Koo, J. -R., Bajek, D., Bramich, D. M., Browne, P., Horne, K., Ipatov, S., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Street, R., Alsubai, K. A., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dreizler, S., Fang, X. -S., Grundahl, F., Gu, C. -H., Hardis, S., Harpsøe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Jessen-Hansen, J., Jørgensen, U. G., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Lund, M., Lundkvist, M., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Hornstrup, A., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Tregloan-Reed, J., Wertz, O., Zimmer, F., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Calitz, J. J., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Cook, K. H., Corrales, E., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouqué, P., Greenhill, J., Hill, K., Hoffman, M., Kane, S. R., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Meintjes, P., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., Vinter, C., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Brown dwarfs are important objects because they may provide a missing link between stars and planets, two populations that have dramatically different formation history. In this paper, we present the candidate binaries with brown dwarf companions that are found by analyzing binary microlensing events discovered during 2004 - 2011 observation seasons. Based on the low mass ratio criterion of q < 0.2, we found 7 candidate events, including OGLE-2004-BLG-035, OGLE-2004-BLG-039, OGLE-2007-BLG-006, OGLE-2007-BLG-399/MOA-2007-BLG-334, MOA-2011-BLG-104/OGLE-2011-BLG-0172, MOA-2011-BLG-149, and MOA-201-BLG-278/OGLE-2011-BLG-012N. Among them, we are able to confirm that the companions of the lenses of MOA-2011-BLG-104/OGLE-2011-BLG-0172 and MOA-2011-BLG-149 are brown dwarfs by determining the mass of the lens based on the simultaneous measurement of the Einstein radius and the lens parallax. The measured mass of the brown dwarf companions are (0.02 +/- 0.01) M_Sun and (0.019 +/- 0.002) M_Sun for MOA-2011-BLG-104/OGLE-2011-BLG-0172 and MOA-2011-BLG-149, respectively, and both companions are orbiting low mass M dwarf host stars. More microlensing brown dwarfs are expected to be detected as the number of lensing events with well covered light curves increases with new generation searches., Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables
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- 2012
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17. A possible binary system of a stellar remnant in the high magnification gravitational microlensing event OGLE-2007-BLG-514
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Miyake, N., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Bennett, D. P., Dong, S., Street, R. A., Greenhill, J., Bond, I. A., Gould, A., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, L., Abe, F., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Holderness, S., Itow, Y., Korpela, A., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Nagayama, T., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Yock, P. C. M., Allen, W., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Gaudi, B. S., Han, C., Lee, C. -U., McCormick, J., Monard, B., Natusch, T., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Allan, A., Bode, M., Bramich, D. M., Clay, N., Dominik, M., Horne, K. D., Kains, N., Mottram, C., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Tsapras, Y., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Beaulieu, J. P., Brillant, S., Burgdorf, M., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Cook, K. H., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouque, P., Jorgensen, U. G., Kane, S., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. B., Martin, R., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the extremely high magnification (A > 1000) binary microlensing event OGLE-2007-BLG-514. We obtained good coverage around the double peak structure in the light curve via follow-up observations from different observatories. The binary lens model that includes the effects of parallax (known orbital motion of the Earth) and orbital motion of the lens yields a binary lens mass ratio of q = 0.321 +/- 0.007 and a projected separation of s = 0.072 +/- 0.001$ in units of the Einstein radius. The parallax parameters allow us to determine the lens distance D_L = 3.11 +/- 0.39 kpc and total mass M_L=1.40 +/- 0.18 M_sun; this leads to the primary and secondary components having masses of M_1 = 1.06 +/- 0.13 M_sun and M_2 = 0.34 +/- 0.04 M_sun, respectively. The parallax model indicates that the binary lens system is likely constructed by the main sequence stars. On the other hand, we used a Bayesian analysis to estimate probability distributions by the model that includes the effects of xallarap (possible orbital motion of the source around a companion) and parallax (q = 0.270 +/- 0.005, s = 0.083 +/- 0.001). The primary component of the binary lens is relatively massive with M_1 = 0.9_{-0.3}^{+4.6} M_sun and it is at a distance of D_L = 2.6_{-0.9}^{+3.8} kpc. Given the secure mass ratio measurement, the companion mass is therefore M_2 = 0.2_{-0.1}^{+1.2} M_sun. The xallarap model implies that the primary lens is likely a stellar remnant, such as a white dwarf, a neutron star or a black hole., Comment: 31 pages, 6 figures, 7 tables, accepted in ApJ
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- 2012
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18. MOA-2010-BLG-477Lb: constraining the mass of a microlensing planet from microlensing parallax, orbital motion and detection of blended light
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Bachelet, E., Shin, I. -G., Han, C., Fouqué, P., Gould, A., Menzies, J. W., Beaulieu, J. -P., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Dong, Subo, Heyrovský, D., Marquette, J. B., Marshall, J., Skowron, J., Street, R. A., Sumi, T., Udalski, A., Abe, L., Agabi, K., Albrow, M. D., Allen, W., Bertin, E., Bos, M., Bramich, D. M., Chavez, J., Christie, G. W., Cole, A. A., Crouzet, N., Dieters, S., Dominik, M., Drummond, J., Greenhill, J., Guillot, T., Henderson, C. B., Hessman, F. V., Horne, K., Hundertmark, M., Johnson, J. A., Jørgensen, U. G., Kandori, R., Liebig, C., Mékarnia, D., McCormick, J., Moorhouse, D., Nagayama, T., Nataf, D., Natusch, T., Nishiyama, S., Rivet, J. -P., Sahu, K. C., Shvartzvald, Y., Thornley, G., Tomczak, A. R., Tsapras, Y., Yee, J. C., Batista, V., Bennett, C. S., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Corrales, E., Coutures, C., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Kubas, D., Martin, R., Williams, A., Zub, M., de Almeida, L. Andrade, DePoy, D. L., Gaudi, B. S., Hung, L. -W., Jablonski, F., Kaspi, S., Klein, N., Lee, C. -U., Lee, Y., Koo, J. -R., Maoz, D., Muñoz, J. A., Pogge, R. W., Polishook, D., Shporer, A., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Harris, P., Itow, Y., Kobara, S., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Ohmori, K., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Soszyński, I., Kubiak, M., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrzyński, G., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Kains, N., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I. A., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dreizler, S., Finet, F., Gerner, T., Hardis, S., Harpsøe, K., Hinse, T. C., Kerins, E., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Schäfer, S., Schönebeck, F., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., and Wambsganss, J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Microlensing detections of cool planets are important for the construction of an unbiased sample to estimate the frequency of planets beyond the snow line, which is where giant planets are thought to form according to the core accretion theory of planet formation. In this paper, we report the discovery of a giant planet detected from the analysis of the light curve of a high-magnification microlensing event MOA-2010-BLG-477. The measured planet-star mass ratio is $q=(2.181\pm0.004)\times 10^{-3}$ and the projected separation is $s=1.1228\pm0.0006$ in units of the Einstein radius. The angular Einstein radius is unusually large $\theta_{\rm E}=1.38\pm 0.11$ mas. Combining this measurement with constraints on the "microlens parallax" and the lens flux, we can only limit the host mass to the range $0.13
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- 2012
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19. A New Type of Ambiguity in the Planet and Binary Interpretations of Central Perturbations of High-Magnification Gravitational Microlensing Events
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Choi, J. -Y., Shin, I. -G., Han, C., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Gould, A., Bozza, V., Dominik, M., Fouqué, P., Horne, K., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Soszyński, I., Pietrzyński, G., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrukowicz, P., Kozłowski, S., Skowron, J., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Kobara, S., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohmori, K., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Suzuki, K., Sweatman, W. L., Takino, S., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Bramich, D. M., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I. A., Street, R. A., Tsapras, Y., Alsubai, K. A., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dreizler, S., Fang, X. -S., Grundahl, F., Gu, C. -H., Hardis, S., Harpsøe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hornstrup, A., Hundertmark, M., Jessen-Hansen, J., Jørgensen, U. G., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Lund, M., Lunkkvist, M., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Tregloan-Reed, J., Wambsganss, J., Wertz, O., Almeida, L. A., Batista, V., Christie, G., DePoy, D. L., Dong, Subo, Gaudi, B. S., Henderson, C., Jablonski, F., Lee, C. -U., McCormick, J., McGregor, D., Moorhouse, D., Natusch, T., Ngan, H., Park, S. -Y., Pogge, R. W., Tan, T. -G., Thornley, G., Yee, J. C., Albrow, M. D., Bachelet, E., Beaulieu, J. -P., Brillant, S., Cassan, A., Cole, A. A., Corrales, E., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Greenhill, J., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Menzies, J. W., Sahu, K. C., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
High-magnification microlensing events provide an important channel to detect planets. Perturbations near the peak of a high-magnification event can be produced either by a planet or a binary companion. It is known that central perturbations induced by both types of companions can be generally distinguished due to the basically different magnification pattern around caustics. In this paper, we present a case of central perturbations for which it is difficult to distinguish the planetary and binary interpretations. The peak of a lensing light curve affected by this perturbation appears to be blunt and flat. For a planetary case, this perturbation occurs when the source trajectory passes the negative perturbation region behind the back end of an arrowhead-shaped central caustic. For a binary case, a similar perturbation occurs for a source trajectory passing through the negative perturbation region between two cusps of an astroid-shaped caustic. We demonstrate the degeneracy for 2 high-magnification events of OGLE-2011-BLG-0526 and OGLE-2011-BLG-0950/MOA-2011-BLG-336. For OGLE-2011-BLG-0526, the $\chi^2$ difference between the planetary and binary model is $\sim$ 3, implying that the degeneracy is very severe. For OGLE-2011-BLG-0950/MOA-2011-BLG-336, the stellar binary model is formally excluded with $\Delta \chi^2 \sim$ 105 and the planetary model is preferred. However, it is difficult to claim a planet discovery because systematic residuals of data from the planetary model are larger than the difference between the planetary and binary models. Considering that 2 events observed during a single season suffer from such a degeneracy, it is expected that central perturbations experiencing this type of degeneracy is common., Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures
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- 2012
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20. Characterizing Low-Mass Binaries From Observation of Long Time-scale Caustic-crossing Gravitational Microlensing Events
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Shin, I. -G., Han, C., Choi, J. -Y., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Gould, A., Bozza, V., Dominik, M., Fouqué, P., Horne, K., Szymański, K., Kubiak, M., Soszyński, I., Pietrzyński, G., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Pietrukowicz, P., Kozłowski, S., Skowron, J., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Chote, P., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Kobara, S., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohmori, K., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Suzuki, K., Sweatman, W. L., Takino, S., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Bramich, D. M., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I. A., Street, R. A., Tsapras, Y., Alsubai, K. A., Browne, P., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dreizler, S., Fang, X. -S., Grundahl, F., Gu, C. -H., Hardis, S., Harpsøe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hornstrup, A., Hundertmark, M., Jessen-Hansen, J., Jørgensen, U. G., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Lund, M., Lunkkvist, M., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Tregloan-Reed, J., Wambsganss, J., Wertz, O., Almeida, L. A., Batista, V., Christie, G., DePoy, D. L., Dong, Subo, Gaudi, B. S., Henderson, C., Jablonski, F., Lee, C. -U., McCormick, J., McGregor, D., Moorhouse, D., Natusch, T., Ngan, H., Park, S. -Y., Pogge, R. W., Tan, T. -G., Thornley, G., Yee, J. C., Albrow, M. D., Bachelet, E., Beaulieu, J. -P., Brillant, S., Cassan, A., Cole, A. A., Corrales, E., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Greenhill, J., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Menzies, J. W., Sahu, K. C., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Despite astrophysical importance of binary star systems, detections are limited to those located in small ranges of separations, distances, and masses and thus it is necessary to use a variety of observational techniques for a complete view of stellar multiplicity across a broad range of physical parameters. In this paper, we report the detections and measurements of 2 binaries discovered from observations of microlensing events MOA-2011-BLG-090 and OGLE-2011-BLG-0417. Determinations of the binary masses are possible by simultaneously measuring the Einstein radius and the lens parallax. The measured masses of the binary components are 0.43 $M_{\odot}$ and 0.39 $M_{\odot}$ for MOA-2011-BLG-090 and 0.57 $M_{\odot}$ and 0.17 $M_{\odot}$ for OGLE-2011-BLG-0417 and thus both lens components of MOA-2011-BLG-090 and one component of OGLE-2011-BLG-0417 are M dwarfs, demonstrating the usefulness of microlensing in detecting binaries composed of low-mass components. From modeling of the light curves considering full Keplerian motion of the lens, we also measure the orbital parameters of the binaries. The blended light of OGLE-2011-BLG-0417 comes very likely from the lens itself, making it possible to check the microlensing orbital solution by follow-up radial-velocity observation. For both events, the caustic-crossing parts of the light curves, which are critical for determining the physical lens parameters, were resolved by high-cadence survey observations and thus it is expected that the number of microlensing binaries with measured physical parameters will increase in the future., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables
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- 2012
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21. Planetary and Other Short Binary Microlensing Events from the MOA Short Event Analysis
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Bennett, D. P., Sumi, T., Bond, I. A., Kamiya, K., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Itow, Y., Korpela, A. V., Kilmartin, P. M., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., and Yock, P. C. M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of four candidate short duration binary microlensing events from the 2006-2007 MOA Project short event analysis. These events were discovered as a byproduct of an analysis designed to find short timescale single lens events that may be due to free-floating planets. Three of these events are determined to be microlensing events, while the fourth is most likely caused by stellar variability. For each of the three microlensing events, the signal is almost entirely due to a brief caustic feature with little or no lensing attributable mainly to the lens primary. One of these events, MOA-bin-1, is due to a planet, and it is the first example of a planetary event in which stellar host is only detected through binary microlensing effects. The mass ratio and separation are q = 4.9 +- 1.4 x 10^{-3} and s = 2.10 +- 0.05, respectively. A Bayesian analysis based on a standard Galactic model indicates that the planet, MOA-bin-1Lb, has a mass of m_p = 3.7 +- 2.1 M_{Jup}, and orbits a star of M_* = 0.75{+0.33 -0.41} M_solar at a semi-major axis of a = 8.3 {+4.5 -2.7} AU. This is one of the most massive and widest separation planets found by microlensing. The scarcity of such wide separation planets also has implications for interpretation of the isolated planetary mass objects found by this analysis. If we assume that we have been able to detect wide separation planets with a efficiency at least as high as that for isolated planets, then we can set limits on the distribution on planets in wide orbits. In particular, if the entire isolated planet sample found by Sumi et al. (2011) consists of planets bound in wide orbits around stars, we find that it is likely that the median orbital semi-major axis is > 30 AU., Comment: 47 pages with 14 figures
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- 2012
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22. OGLE-2008-BLG-510: first automated real-time detection of a weak microlensing anomaly - brown dwarf or stellar binary?
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Bozza, V., Dominik, M., Rattenbury, N. J., Joergensen, U. G., Tsapras, Y., Bramich, D. M., Udalski, A., Bond, I. A., Liebig, C., Cassan, A., Fouque, P., Fukui, A., Hundertmark, M., Shin, I. -G., Lee, S. H., Choi, J. -Y., Park, S. -Y., Gould, A., Allan, A., Mao, S., Wyrzykowski, L., Street, R. A., Buckley, D., Nagayama, T., Mathiasen, M., Hinse, T. C., Novati, S. Calchi, Harpsoee, K., Mancini, L., Scarpetta, G., Anguita, T., Burgdorf, M. J., Horne, K., Hornstrup, A., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Kjaergaard, P., Masi, G., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Snodgrass, C., Southworth, J., Steele, I. A., Surdej, J., Thoene, C. C., Wambsganss, J., Zub, M., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Beaulieu, J. -P., Bennett, D. P., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cole, A, Cook, K. H., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Greenhill, J., Kane, S. R., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Williams, A., Szymanski, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., DePoy, D. L., Dong, S., Han, C., Janczak, J., Lee, C. -U., Pogge, R. W., Abe, F., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A. V., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Gulbis, A., Hashimoto, Y., Kniazev, A., and Vaisanen, P.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The microlensing event OGLE-2008-BLG-510 is characterised by an evident asymmetric shape of the peak, promptly detected by the ARTEMiS system in real time. The skewness of the light curve appears to be compatible both with binary-lens and binary-source models, including the possibility that the lens system consists of an M dwarf orbited by a brown dwarf. The detection of this microlensing anomaly and our analysis demonstrates that: 1) automated real-time detection of weak microlensing anomalies with immediate feedback is feasible, efficient, and sensitive, 2) rather common weak features intrinsically come with ambiguities that are not easily resolved from photometric light curves, 3) a modelling approach that finds all features of parameter space rather than just the `favourite model' is required, and 4) the data quality is most crucial, where systematics can be confused with real features, in particular small higher-order effects such as orbital motion signatures. It moreover becomes apparent that events with weak signatures are a silver mine for statistical studies, although not easy to exploit. Clues about the apparent paucity of both brown-dwarf companions and binary-source microlensing events might hide here., Comment: 17 pages with 8 figures, MNRAS submitted
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- 2012
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23. Characterizing Lenses and Lensed Stars of High-Magnification Single-lens Gravitational Microlensing Events With Lenses Passing Over Source Stars
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Choi, J. -Y., Shin, I. -G., Park, S. -Y., Han, C., Gould, A., Sumi, T., Udalski, A., Beaulieu, J. -P., Street, R., Dominik, M., Allen, W., Almeida, L. A., Bos, M., Christie, G. W., Depoy, D. L., Dong, S., Drummond, J., Gal-Yam, A., Gaudi, B. S., Henderson, C. B., Hung, L. -W., Jablonski, F., Janczak, J., Lee, C. -U., Mallia, F., Maury, A., McCormick, J., McGregor, D., Monard, L. A. G., Moorhouse, D., Muñoz, J. A., Natusch, T., Nelson, C., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Tan, T. -G. "TG", Thornley, G., Yee, J. C., Abe, F., Barnard, E., Baudry, J., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Kobara, S., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Omori, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Suzuki, K., Sweatman, W. L., Takino, S., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzyński, G., Soszyński, I., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Kozłowski, S., Pietrukowicz, P., Albrow, M. D., Bachelet, E., Batista, V., Bennett, C. S., Bowens-Rubin, R., Brillant, S., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Corrales, E., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouqué, P., Greenhill, J., Kane, S. R., Menzies, J., Sahu, K. C., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., Zub, M., Allan, A., Bramich, D. M., Browne, P., Clay, N., Fraser, S., Horne, K., Kains, N., Mottram, C., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Tsapras, Y., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dreizler, S., Finet, F., Gerner, T., Glitrup, M., Grundahl, F., Hardis, S., Harpsøe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Jørgensen, U. G., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Maier, G., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Schäfer, S., Schönebeck, F., Skottfelt, J., Surdej, J., Southworth, J., and Zimmer, F.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of the light curves of 9 high-magnification single-lens gravitational microlensing events with lenses passing over source stars, including OGLE-2004-BLG-254, MOA-2007-BLG-176, MOA-2007-BLG-233/OGLE-2007-BLG-302, MOA-2009-BLG-174, MOA-2010-BLG-436, MOA-2011-BLG-093, MOA-2011-BLG-274, OGLE-2011-BLG-0990/MOA-2011-BLG-300, and OGLE-2011-BLG-1101/MOA-2011-BLG-325. For all events, we measure the linear limb-darkening coefficients of the surface brightness profile of source stars by measuring the deviation of the light curves near the peak affected by the finite-source effect. For 7 events, we measure the Einstein radii and the lens-source relative proper motions. Among them, 5 events are found to have Einstein radii less than 0.2 mas, making the lenses candidates of very low-mass stars or brown dwarfs. For MOA-2011-BLG-274, especially, the small Einstein radius of $\theta_{\rm E}\sim 0.08$ mas combined with the short time scale of $t_{\rm E}\sim 2.7$ days suggests the possibility that the lens is a free-floating planet. For MOA-2009-BLG-174, we measure the lens parallax and thus uniquely determine the physical parameters of the lens. We also find that the measured lens mass of $\sim 0.84\ M_\odot$ is consistent with that of a star blended with the source, suggesting that the blend is likely to be the lens. Although we find planetary signals for none of events, we provide exclusion diagrams showing the confidence levels excluding the existence of a planet as a function of the separation and mass ratio., Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, 5 tables
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- 2011
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24. Microlensing Binaries Discovered through High-Magnification Channel
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Shin, I. -G., Choi, J. -Y., Park, S. -Y., Han, C., Gould, A., Sumi, T., Udalski, A., Beaulieu, J. -P., Dominik, M., Allen, W., Bos, M., Christie, G. W., Depoy, D. L., Dong, S., Drummond, J., Gal-Yam, A., Gaudi, B. S., Hung, L. -W., Janczak, J., Kaspi, S., Lee, C. -U., Mallia, F., Maoz, D., Maury, A., McCormick, J., Monard, L. A. G., Moorhouse, D., Muñoz, J. A., Natusch, T., Nelson, C., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Polishook, D., Shvartzvald, Y., Shporer, A., Thornley, G., Yee, J. C., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Kobara, S., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Omori, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzyński, G., Soszyński, I., Poleski, R., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Kozłowski, S., Pietrukowicz, P., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Bramich, D. M., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Calitz, J. J., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Cook, K. H., Corrales, E., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouqué, P., Greenhill, J., Hoffman, M., Jørgensen, U. G., Kane, S. R., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Meintjes, P., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., Vinter, C., Zub, M., Allan, A., Browne, P., Horne, K., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Street, R., Tsapras, Y., Alsubai, K. A., Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dodds, P., Dreizler, S., Finet, F., Gerner, T., Glitrup, M., Grundahl, F., Hardis, S., Harpsøe, K., Hessman, F. V., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Kains, N., Kerins, E., Liebig, C., Maier, G., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Penny, M. T., Proft, S., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Schäfer, S., Schönebeck, F., Skottfelt, J., Surdej, J., Southworth, J., and Zimmer, F.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Microlensing can provide a useful tool to probe binary distributions down to low-mass limits of binary companions. In this paper, we analyze the light curves of 8 binary lensing events detected through the channel of high-magnification events during the seasons from 2007 to 2010. The perturbations, which are confined near the peak of the light curves, can be easily distinguished from the central perturbations caused by planets. However, the degeneracy between close and wide binary solutions cannot be resolved with a $3\sigma$ confidence level for 3 events, implying that the degeneracy would be an important obstacle in studying binary distributions. The dependence of the degeneracy on the lensing parameters is consistent with a theoretic prediction that the degeneracy becomes severe as the binary separation and the mass ratio deviate from the values of resonant caustics. The measured mass ratio of the event OGLE-2008-BLG-510/MOA-2008-BLG-369 is $q\sim 0.1$, making the companion of the lens a strong brown-dwarf candidate., Comment: 10 figures, 6 tables, 26 pages
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- 2011
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25. Chemical evolution of the Galactic bulge as traced by microlensed dwarf and subgiant stars. IV. Two bulge populations
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Bensby, T., Adén, D., Meléndez, J., Gould, A., Feltzing, S., Asplund, M., Johnson, J. A., Lucatello, S., Yee, J. C., Ramírez, I., Cohen, J. G., Thompson, I., Bond, I. A., Gal-Yam, A., Han, C., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Wada, K., Miyake, N., Furusawa, K., Ohmori, K., Saito, To., Tristram, P., and Bennett, D.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
[ABRIDGED] Based on high-resolution (R~42000 to 48000) and high signal-to-noise (S/N~50 to 150) spectra obtained with UVES/VLT, we present detailed elemental abundances (O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn, Y, and Ba) and stellar ages for 26 microlensed dwarf and subgiant stars in the Galactic bulge. The analysis is based on equivalent width measurements and standard 1-D LTE MARCS model stellar atmospheres. We also present NLTE Li abundances based on line synthesis of the 7Li line at 670.8 nm. We show that the bulge metallicity distribution (MDF) is double-peaked; one peak at [Fe/H]= -0.6 and one at [Fe/H]=+0.3, and with a dearth of stars around solar metallicity. This is in contrast to the MDF derived from red giants in Baade's window, which peaks at this exact value. A simple significance test shows that it is extremely unlikely to have such a gap in the microlensed dwarf star MDF if the dwarf stars are drawn from the giant star MDF. To resolve this issue we discuss several possibilities, but we can not settle on a conclusive solution for the observed differences. We further find that the metal-poor bulge dwarf stars are predominantly old with ages greater than 10\,Gyr, while the metal-rich bulge dwarf stars show a wide range of ages. The metal-poor bulge sample is very similar to the Galactic thick disk in terms of average metallicity, elemental abundance trends, and stellar ages. Speculatively, the metal-rich bulge population might be the manifestation of the inner thin disk. If so, the two bulge populations could support the recent findings, based on kinematics, that there are no signatures of a classical bulge and that the Milky Way is a pure-disk galaxy. Also, recent claims of a flat IMF in the bulge based on the MDF of giant stars may have to be revised based on the MDF and abundance trends probed by our microlensed dwarf stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, new version with with missing authors added
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- 2011
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26. 1 um Excess Sources in the UKIDSS - I. Three T Dwarfs in the SDSS Southern Equatorial Stripe
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Matsuoka, Y., Peterson, B. A., Murata, K. L., Fujiwara, M., Nagayama, T., Suenaga, T., Furusawa, K., Miyake, N., Omori, K., Suzuki, D., and Wada, K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of two field brown dwarfs, ULAS J0128-0041 and ULAS J0321+0051, and the rediscovery of ULAS J0226+0051 (IfA 0230-Z1), in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) southern equatorial stripe. They are found in the course of our follow-up observation program of 1 um excess sources in the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope Infrared Deep Sky Survey. The Gemini Multi-Object Spectrographs spectra at red optical wavelengths (6500-10500 A) are presented, which reveal that they are early-T dwarfs. The classification is also supported by their optical to near-infrared colors. It is noted that ULAS J0321+0051 is one of the faintest currently known T dwarfs. The estimated distances to the three objects are 50-110 pc, thus they are among the most distant field T dwarfs known. Dense temporal coverage of the target fields achieved by the SDSS-II Supernova Survey allows us to perform a simple time-series analysis, which leads to the finding of significant proper motions of 150-290 mas/yr or the transverse velocities of 40-100 km/s for ULAS J0128-0041 and ULAS J0226+0051. We also find that there are no detectable, long-term (a-few-year) brightness variations above a few times 0.1 mag for the two brown dwarfs., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal; Typos corrected
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- 2011
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27. Discovery and Mass Measurements of a Cold, 10-Earth Mass Planet and Its Host Star
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Muraki, Y., Han, C., Bennett, D. P., Suzuki, D., Monard, L. A. G., Street, R., Jorgensen, U. G., Kundurthy, P., Skowron, J., Becker, A. C., Albrow, M. D., Fouque, P., Heyrovsky, D., Barry, R. K., Beaulieu, J. -P., Wellnitz, D. D., Bond, I. A., Sumi, T., Dong, S., Gaudi, B. S., Bramich, D. M., Dominik, M., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Korpela, A. V., Kilmartin, P. M., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Gorbikov, E., Gould, A., Kaspi, S., Lee, C. -U., Mallia, F., Maoz, D., McCormick, J., Moorhouse, D., Natusch, T., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Polishook, D., Shporer, A., Thornley, G., Yee, J. C., Allan, A., Browne, P., Horne, K., Kains, N., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Tsapras, Y., Batista, V., Bennett, C. S., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Corrales, R., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Greenhill, J., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Menzies, J, Sahu, K. C., Waldman, I., Zub, A. Williams M., Bourhrous, H., Matsuoka, Y., Nagayama, T., Oi, N., Randriamanakoto, Z., Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dreizler, S., Finet, F., Glitrup, M., Harpsoe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Liebig, C., Maier, G., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Surdej, J., Southworth, J., Wambsganss, J., Zimmer, F., Udalski, A., Poleski, R., Wyrzykowski, L., Ulaczyk, K., Szymanski, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzynski, G., and Soszynski, I.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery and mass measurement of the cold, low-mass planet MOA-2009-BLG-266Lb, made with the gravitational microlensing method. This planet has a mass of m_p = 10.4 +- 1.7 Earth masses and orbits a star of mass M_* = 0.56 +- 0.09 Solar masses at a semi-major axis of a = 3.2 (+1.9 -0.5) AU and an orbital period of P = 7.6 (+7.7 -1.5} yrs. The planet and host star mass measurements are enabled by the measurement of the microlensing parallax effect, which is seen primarily in the light curve distortion due to the orbital motion of the Earth. But, the analysis also demonstrates the capability to measure microlensing parallax with the Deep Impact (or EPOXI) spacecraft in a Heliocentric orbit. The planet mass and orbital distance are similar to predictions for the critical core mass needed to accrete a substantial gaseous envelope, and thus may indicate that this planet is a "failed" gas giant. This and future microlensing detections will test planet formation theory predictions regarding the prevalence and masses of such planets., Comment: 38 pages with 7 figures
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- 2011
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28. Unbound or Distant Planetary Mass Population Detected by Gravitational Microlensing
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Sumi, T., Kamiya, K., Udalski, A., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Motomura, M., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Nakamura, S., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Yock, P. C. M., Szymanski, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzynski, G., Poleski, R., Soszynski, I., Wyrzykowski, L., and Ulaczyk, K.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Since 1995, more than 500 exoplanets have been detected using different techniques, of which 11 were detected with gravitational microlensing. Most of these are gravitationally bound to their host stars. There is some evidence of free-floating planetary mass objects in young star-forming regions, but these objects are limited to massive objects of 3 to 15 Jupiter masses with large uncertainties in photometric mass estimates and their abundance. Here, we report the discovery of a population of unbound or distant Jupiter-mass objects, which are almost twice (1.8_{-0.8}^{+1.7}) as common as main-sequence stars, based on two years of gravitational microlensing survey observations toward the Galactic Bulge. These planetary-mass objects have no host stars that can be detected within about ten astronomical units by gravitational microlensing. However a comparison with constraints from direct imaging suggests that most of these planetary-mass objects are not bound to any host star. An abrupt change in the mass function at about a Jupiter mass favours the idea that their formation process is different from that of stars and brown dwarfs. They may have formed in proto-planetary disks and subsequently scattered into unbound or very distant orbits., Comment: 46 pages, 14 figures, include Supplementary Information, published in Nature
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- 2011
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29. OGLE-2009-BLG-023/MOA-2009-BLG-028: Characterization of a Binary Microlensing Event Based on Survey Data
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Hwang, K. -H., Han, C., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Gould, A., Jaroszynski, M., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Szewczyk, O., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, L., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sako, T., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., and Yock, P. C. M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the result of the analysis of the light curve of a caustic-crossing binary-lens microlensing event OGLE-2009-BLG-023/MOA-2009-BLG-028. Even though the event was observed solely by survey experiments, we could uniquely determine the mass of the lens and distance to it by simultaneously measuring the Einstein radius and lens parallax. From this, we find that the lens system is composed of M-type dwarfs with masses $(0.50\pm 0.07) \ M_\odot$ and $(0.15\pm 0.02)\ M_\odot$ located in the Galactic disk with a distance of $\sim 1.8$ kpc toward the Galactic bulge direction. The event demonstrates that physical lens parameters of binary-lens events can be routinely determined from future high-cadence lensing surveys and thus microlensing can provide a new way to study Galactic binaries., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures
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- 2011
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30. Binary microlensing event OGLE-2009-BLG-020 gives a verifiable mass, distance and orbit predictions
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Skowron, J., Udalski, A., Gould, A., Dong, Subo, Monard, L. A. G., Han, C., Nelson, C. R., McCormick, J., Moorhouse, D., Thornley, G., Maury, A., Bramich, D. M., Greenhill, J., Kozlowski, S., Bond, I., Poleski, R., Wyrzykowski, L., Ulaczyk, K., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Gaudi, B. S., Yee, J. C., Hung, L. -W., Pogge, R. W., DePoy, D. L., Lee, C. -U., Park, B. -G., Allen, W., Mallia, F., Drummond, J., Bolt, G., Allan, A., Browne, P., Clay, N., Dominik, M., Fraser, S., Horne, K., Kains, N., Mottram, C., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Street, R. A., Tsapras, Y., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Botzler, C. S., Douchin, D., Freeman, M., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Nagayama, T., Miyake, N., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Beaulieu, J. -P., Fouque, P., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Cook, K. H., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Kane, S. R., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. -B., Martin, R., Menzies, J., Sahu, K. C., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first example of binary microlensing for which the parameter measurements can be verified (or contradicted) by future Doppler observations. This test is made possible by a confluence of two relatively unusual circumstances. First, the binary lens is bright enough (I=15.6) to permit Doppler measurements. Second, we measure not only the usual 7 binary-lens parameters, but also the 'microlens parallax' (which yields the binary mass) and two components of the instantaneous orbital velocity. Thus we measure, effectively, 6 'Kepler+1' parameters (two instantaneous positions, two instantaneous velocities, the binary total mass, and the mass ratio). Since Doppler observations of the brighter binary component determine 5 Kepler parameters (period, velocity amplitude, eccentricity, phase, and position of periapsis), while the same spectroscopy yields the mass of the primary, the combined Doppler + microlensing observations would be overconstrained by 6 + (5 + 1) - (7 + 1) = 4 degrees of freedom. This makes possible an extremely strong test of the microlensing solution. We also introduce a uniform microlensing notation for single and binary lenses, we define conventions, summarize all known microlensing degeneracies and extend a set of parameters to describe full Keplerian motion of the binary lenses., Comment: 51 pages, 8 figures, 2 appendices. Submitted to ApJ. Fortran codes for Appendix B are attached to this astro-ph submission and are also available at http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~jskowron/OGLE-2009-BLG-020/
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- 2011
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31. A sub-Saturn Mass Planet, MOA-2009-BLG-319Lb
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Miyake, N., Sumi, T., Dong, Subo, Street, R., Mancini, L., Gould, A., Bennett, D. P., Tsapras, Y., Yee, J. C., Albrow, M. D., Bond, I. A., Fouque, P., Browne, P., Han, C., Snodgrass, C., Finet, F., Furusawa, K., Harpsoe, K., Allen, W., Hundertmark, M., Freeman, M., Suzuki, D., Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Douchin, D., Fukui, A., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Nagayama, T., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Collaboration, The MOA, Bolt, G., Bos, M., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Drummond, J., Gal-Yam, A., Gaudi, B. S., Gorbikov, E., Higgins, D., Janczak, K. -H. Hwang J., Kaspi, S., Lee, C. -U., Koo, J. -R., lowski, S. Koz, Lee, Y., Mallia, F., Maury, A., Maoz, D., McCormick, J., Monard, L. A. G., Moorhouse, D., Mu~noz, J. A., Natusch, T., Ofek, E. O., Pogge, R. W., Polishook, D., Santallo, R., Shporer, A., Spector, O., Thornley, G., Collaboration, The Micro FUN, Allan, A., Bramich, D. M., Horne, K., Kains, N., Steele, I., Collaboration, The RoboNet, Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dominik, M., Dreizler, S., Glitrup, M., Hessman, F. V., Hinse, T. C., Jorgensen, U. G., Liebig, C., Maier, G., Mathiasen, M., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Wambsganss, J., Zimmer, F., Consortium, The MiNDSTEp, Batista, V., Beaulieu, J. P., Brillant, S., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Corrales, E., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Greenhill, J., Kubas, D., Menzies, J., and Collaboration, The PLANET
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the gravitational microlensing discovery of a sub-Saturn mass planet, MOA-2009-BLG-319Lb, orbiting a K or M-dwarf star in the inner Galactic disk or Galactic bulge. The high cadence observations of the MOA-II survey discovered this microlensing event and enabled its identification as a high magnification event approximately 24 hours prior to peak magnification. As a result, the planetary signal at the peak of this light curve was observed by 20 different telescopes, which is the largest number of telescopes to contribute to a planetary discovery to date. The microlensing model for this event indicates a planet-star mass ratio of q = (3.95 +/- 0.02) x 10^{-4} and a separation of d = 0.97537 +/- 0.00007 in units of the Einstein radius. A Bayesian analysis based on the measured Einstein radius crossing time, t_E, and angular Einstein radius, \theta_E, along with a standard Galactic model indicates a host star mass of M_L = 0.38^{+0.34}_{-0.18} M_{Sun} and a planet mass of M_p = 50^{+44}_{-24} M_{Earth}, which is half the mass of Saturn. This analysis also yields a planet-star three-dimensional separation of a = 2.4^{+1.2}_{-0.6} AU and a distance to the planetary system of D_L = 6.1^{+1.1}_{-1.2} kpc. This separation is ~ 2 times the distance of the snow line, a separation similar to most of the other planets discovered by microlensing., Comment: accepted to ApJ, 28 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables
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- 2010
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32. OGLE-2009-BLG-092/MOA-2009-BLG-137: A Dramatic Repeating Event With the Second Perturbation Predicted by Real-Time Analysis
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Ryu, Y. -H., Han, C., Hwang, K. -H., Street, R., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Fukui, A., Beaulieu, J. -P., Gould, A., Dominik, M., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Furusawa, K., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Wada, K., Yock, P. C. M., Szymański, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzyński, G., Soszyński, I., Szewczyk, O., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Ulaczyk, K., Bos, M., Christie, G. W., Depoy, D. L., Gal-Yam, A., Gaudi, B. S., Kaspi, S., Lee, C. -U., Maoz, D., McCormick, J., Monard, B., Moorhouse, D., Pogge, R. W., Polishook, D., Shvartzvald, Y., Shporer, A., Thornley, G., Yee, J. C., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Brillant, S., Cassan, A., Cole, A., Corrales, E., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Fouqué, P., Greenhill, J., Menzies, J., Allan, A., Bramich, D. M., Browne, P., Horne, K., Kains, N., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Tsapras, Y., Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., Novati, S. Calchi, Dreizler, S., Finet, F., Glitrup, M., Grundahl, F., Harpsøe, K., Hessman, F. V., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Jørgensen, U. G., Liebig, C., Maier, G., Mancini, L., Mathiasen, M., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Skottfelt, J., Surdej, J., Southworth, J., Wambsganss, J., and Zimmer, F.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the result of the analysis of a dramatic repeating gravitational microlensing event OGLE-2009-BLG-092/MOA-2009-BLG-137, for which the light curve is characterized by two distinct peaks with perturbations near both peaks. We find that the event is produced by the passage of the source trajectory over the central perturbation regions associated with the individual components of a wide-separation binary. The event is special in the sense that the second perturbation, occurring $\sim 100$ days after the first, was predicted by the real-time analysis conducted after the first peak, demonstrating that real-time modeling can be routinely done for binary and planetary events. With the data obtained from follow-up observations covering the second peak, we are able to uniquely determine the physical parameters of the lens system. We find that the event occurred on a bulge clump giant and it was produced by a binary lens composed of a K and M-type main-sequence stars. The estimated masses of the binary components are $M_1=0.69 \pm 0.11\ M_\odot$ and $M_2=0.36\pm 0.06\ M_\odot$, respectively, and they are separated in projection by $r_\perp=10.9\pm 1.3\ {\rm AU}$. The measured distance to the lens is $D_{\rm L}=5.6 \pm 0.7\ {\rm kpc}$. We also detect the orbital motion of the lens system., Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, 1 table
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- 2010
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33. Determining the Physical Lens Parameters of the Binary Gravitational Microlensing Event MOA-2009-BLG-016
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Hwang, K. -H., Han, C., Bond, I. A., Miyake, N., Abe, F., Bennett, D. P., Botzler, C. S., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hayashi, F., Hearnshaw, J. B., Hosaka, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Makita, S., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Nishimoto, K., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, J., Wada, K., L., P. C. M. Yock D., Depoy, Gaudi, B. S., Gould, A., Lee, C. -U., and Pogge, R. W.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the result of the analysis of the light curve of the microlensing event MOA-2009-BLG-016. The light curve is characterized by a short-duration anomaly near the peak and an overall asymmetry. We find that the peak anomaly is due to a binary companion to the primary lens and the asymmetry of the light curve is explained by the parallax effect caused by the acceleration of the observer over the course of the event due to the orbital motion of the Earth around the Sun. In addition, we detect evidence for the effect of the finite size of the source near the peak of the event, which allows us to measure the angular Einstein radius of the lens system. The Einstein radius combined with the microlens parallax allows us to determine the total mass of the lens and the distance to the lens. We identify three distinct classes of degenerate solutions for the binary lens parameters, where two are manifestations of the previously identified degeneracies of close/wide binaries and positive/negative impact parameters, while the third class is caused by the symmetric cycloid shape of the caustic. We find that, for the best-fit solution, the estimated mass of the lower-mass component of the binary is (0.04 +- 0.01) M_sun, implying a brown-dwarf companion. However, there exists a solution that is worse only by \Delta\chi^2 ~ 3 for which the mass of the secondary is above the hydrogen-burning limit. Unfortunately, resolving these two degenerate solutions will be difficult as the relative lens-source proper motions for both are similar and small (~ 1 mas/yr) and thus the lens will remain blended with the source for the next several decades., Comment: 7 pages, 2 tables, and 5 figures
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- 2010
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34. OGLE 2008--BLG--290: An accurate measurement of the limb darkening of a Galactic Bulge K Giant spatially resolved by microlensing
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Fouque, P., Heyrovsky, D., Dong, S., Gould, A., Udalski, A., Albrow, M. D., Batista, V., Beaulieu, J. -P., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Bramich, D. M., Novati, S. Calchi, Cassan, A., Coutures, C., Dieters, S., Dominik, M., Prester, D. Dominis, Greenhill, J., Horne, K., Jorgensen, U. G., Kozlowski, S., Kubas, D., Lee, C. -H., Marquette, J. -B., Mathiasen, M., Menzies, J., Monard, L. A. G., Nishiyama, S., Papadakis, I., Street, R., Sumi, T., Williams, A., Yee, J. C., Brillant, S., Caldwell, J. A. R., Cole, A., Cook, K. H., Donatowicz, J., Kains, N., Kane, S. R., Martin, R., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Tsapras, Y., Wambsganss, J., Zub, M., DePoy, D. L., Gaudi, B. S., Han, C., Lee, C. -U., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Szewczyk, O., Ulaczyk, K., Wyrzykowski, L., Abe, F., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Gilmore, A. C., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A. V., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Perrott, Y., Rattenbury, N. J., Saito, To., Sako, T., Sato, S., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D., Sweatman, W., Tristram, P. J., Yock, P. C. M., Allan, A., Bode, M. F., Burgdorf, M. J., Clay, N., Fraser, S. N., Hawkins, E., Kerins, E., Lister, T. A., Mottram, C. J., Saunders, E. S., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I. A., Wheatley, P. J., Anguita, T., Bozza, V., Harpsoe, K., Hinse, T. C., Hundertmark, M., Kjaergaard, P., Liebig, C., Mancini, L., Masi, G., Rahvar, S., Ricci, D., Scarpetta, G., Southworth, J., Surdej, J., Thone, C. C., Riffeser, A., Seitz, S., and Bender, R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Gravitational microlensing is not only a successful tool for discovering distant exoplanets, but it also enables characterization of the lens and source stars involved in the lensing event. In high magnification events, the lens caustic may cross over the source disk, which allows a determination of the angular size of the source and additionally a measurement of its limb darkening. When such extended-source effects appear close to maximum magnification, the resulting light curve differs from the characteristic Paczynski point-source curve. The exact shape of the light curve close to the peak depends on the limb darkening of the source. Dense photometric coverage permits measurement of the respective limb-darkening coefficients. In the case of microlensing event OGLE 2008-BLG-290, the K giant source star reached a peak magnification of about 100. Thirteen different telescopes have covered this event in eight different photometric bands. Subsequent light-curve analysis yielded measurements of linear limb-darkening coefficients of the source in six photometric bands. The best-measured coefficients lead to an estimate of the source effective temperature of about 4700 +100-200 K. However, the photometric estimate from colour-magnitude diagrams favours a cooler temperature of 4200 +-100 K. As the limb-darkening measurements, at least in the CTIO/SMARTS2 V and I bands, are among the most accurate obtained, the above disagreement needs to be understood. A solution is proposed, which may apply to previous events where such a discrepancy also appeared., Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics in press
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- 2010
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35. A Cold Neptune-Mass Planet OGLE-2007-BLG-368Lb: Cold Neptunes Are Common
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Sumi, T., Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Udalski, A., Batista, V., Dominik, M., Fouqué, P., Kubas, D., Gould, A., Macintosh, B., Cook, K., Dong, S., Skuljan, L., Cassan, A., Collaboration, The MOA, Abe, F., Botzler, C. S., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Nagayama, T., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Yock, P. C. M., Collaboration, The PLANET, Beaulieu, J. P., Cole, A., Coutures, Ch., Duran, M. F., Greenhill, J., Jablonski, F., Marboeuf, U., Martioli, E., Pedretti, E., Pejcha, O., Rojo, P., Albrow, M. D., Brillant, S., Bode, M., Bramich, D. M., Burgdorf, M. J., Caldwell, J. A. R., Calitz, H., Corrales, E., Dieters, S., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Hill, K., Hoffman, M., Horne, K., J, U. G., Kains, N., Kane, S., Marquette, J. B., Martin, R., Meintjes, P., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Street, R., Tsapras, Y., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., Zub, M., Collaboration, The OGLE, Szyma, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzy, G., Soszy, I., Szewczyk, O., Ulaczyk, K., Collaboration, The microFUN, Allen, W., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Gaudi, B. S., Han, C., Janczak, J., Lee, C. -U., McCormick, J., Mallia, F., Monard, B., Natusch, T., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., and Santallo, R.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of a Neptune-mass planet OGLE-2007-BLG-368Lb with a planet-star mass ratio of q=[9.5 +/- 2.1] x 10^{-5} via gravitational microlensing. The planetary deviation was detected in real-time thanks to the high cadence of the MOA survey, real-time light curve monitoring and intensive follow-up observations. A Bayesian analysis returns the stellar mass and distance at M_l = 0.64_{-0.26}^{+0.21} M_\sun and D_l = 5.9_{-1.4}^{+0.9} kpc, respectively, so the mass and separation of the planet are M_p = 20_{-8}^{+7} M_\oplus and a = 3.3_{-0.8}^{+1.4} AU, respectively. This discovery adds another cold Neptune-mass planet to the planetary sample discovered by microlensing, which now comprise four cold Neptune/Super-Earths, five gas giant planets, and another sub-Saturn mass planet whose nature is unclear. The discovery of these ten cold exoplanets by the microlensing method implies that the mass ratio function of cold exoplanets scales as dN_{\rm pl}/d\log q \propto q^{-0.7 +/- 0.2} with a 95% confidence level upper limit of n < -0.35 (where dN_{\rm pl}/d\log q \propto q^n). As microlensing is most sensitive to planets beyond the snow-line, this implies that Neptune-mass planets are at least three times more common than Jupiters in this region at the 95% confidence level., Comment: 39 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2009
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36. Interpretation of Strong Short-Term Central Perturbations in the Light Curves of Moderate-Magnification Microlensing Events
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Han, C., Hwang, K. -H., Kim, D., Udalski, A., Abe, F., Monard, L. A. B., McCormick, J., Szymanski, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Szewczyk, O., Wyrzykowski, L., Ulaczyk, K., Bond, I. A., Botzler, C. S., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Ohnishi, K., Tokumura, T., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. S., Sumi, T., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Yock, P. C. M., Allen, W., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Dong, S., Gaudi, B. S., Gould, A., Lee, C. -U., Natusch, T., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Albrow, M. D., Allan, A., Batista, V., Beaulieu, J. P., Bennett, D. P., Brillant, S., Bode, M., Bramich, D. M., Burgdorf, M., Caldwell, J. A. R., Calitz, H., Cassan, A., Corrales, E., Dieters, S., Prester, D. D., Dominik, M., Donatowicz, J., Fouque, P., Greenhill, J., Hill, K., Hoffman, M., Horne, K., Jorgensen, U. G., Kains, N., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. B., Martin, R., Meintjes, P., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Street, R., Tsapras, Y., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., and Zub, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
To improve the planet detection efficiency, current planetary microlensing experiments are focused on high-magnification events searching for planetary signals near the peak of lensing light curves. However, it is known that central perturbations can also be produced by binary companions and thus it is important to distinguish planetary signals from those induced by binary companions. In this paper, we analyze the light curves of microlensing events OGLE-2007-BLG-137/MOA-2007-BLG-091, OGLE-2007-BLG-355/MOA-2007-BLG-278, and MOA-2007-BLG-199/OGLE-2007-BLG-419, for all of which exhibit short-term perturbations near the peaks of the light curves. From detailed modeling of the light curves, we find that the perturbations of the events are caused by binary companions rather than planets. From close examination of the light curves combined with the underlying physical geometry of the lens system obtained from modeling, we find that the short time-scale caustic-crossing feature occurring at a low or a moderate base magnification with an additional secondary perturbation is a typical feature of binary-lens events and thus can be used for the discrimination between the binary and planetary interpretations., Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
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- 2009
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37. Mass measurement of a single unseen star and planetary detection efficiency for OGLE 2007-BLG-050
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Batista, V., Dong, Subo, Gould, A., Beaulieu, J. P., Cassan, A., Christie, G. W., Han, C., Udalski, A., Allen, W., DePoy, D. L., Gal-Yam, A., Gaudi, B. S., Johnson, B., Kaspi, S., Lee, C. U., Maoz, D., McCormick, J., McGreer, I., Monard, B., Natusch, T., Ofek, E., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Polishook, D., Shporer, A., Albrow, M. D., Bennett, D. P., Brillant, S., Bode, M., Bramich, D. M., Burgdorf, M., Caldwell, J. A. R., Calitz, H., Cole, A., Cook, K. H., Coutures, Ch., Dieters, S., Dominik, M., Prester, D. Dominis, Donatowicz, J., Fouqué, P., Greenhill, J., Hoffman, M., Horne, K., Jørgensen, U. G., Kains, N., Kane, S., Kubas, D., Marquette, J. B., Martin, R., Meintjes, P., Menzies, J., Pollard, K. R., Sahu, K. C., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I., Tsapras, Y., Wambsganss, J., Williams, A., Zub, M., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Kubiak, M., Szymański, M. K., Pietrzyński, G., Soszyński, I., Szewczyk, O., Ulaczyk, K., Abe, F., Bond, I. A., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Holderness, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D., Sumi, T., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., and Yock, P. C. M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze OGLE-2007-BLG-050, a high magnification microlensing event (A ~ 432) whose peak occurred on 2 May, 2007, with pronounced finite-source and parallax effects. We compute planet detection efficiencies for this event in order to determine its sensitivity to the presence of planets around the lens star. Both finite-source and parallax effects permit a measurement of the angular Einstein radius \theta_E = 0.48 +/- 0.01 mas and the parallax \pi_E = 0.12 +/- 0.03, leading to an estimate of the lens mass M = 0.50 +/- 0.14 M_Sun and its distance to the observer D_L = 5.5 +/- 0.4 kpc. This is only the second determination of a reasonably precise (<30%) mass estimate for an isolated unseen object, using any method. This allows us to calculate the planetary detection efficiency in physical units (r_\perp, m_p), where r_\perp is the projected planet-star separation and m_p is the planet mass. When computing planet detection efficiency, we did not find any planetary signature and our detection efficiency results reveal significant sensitivity to Neptune-mass planets, and to a lesser extent Earth-mass planets in some configurations. Indeed, Jupiter and Neptune-mass planets are excluded with a high confidence for a large projected separation range between the planet and the lens star, respectively [0.6 - 10] and [1.4 - 4] AU, and Earth-mass planets are excluded with a 10% confidence in the lensing zone, i.e. [1.8 - 3.1] AU., Comment: 20 pages, 23 figures
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- 2009
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38. Microlensing Event MOA-2007-BLG-400: Exhuming the Buried Signature of a Cool, Jovian-Mass Planet
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Dong, Subo, Bond, I. A., Gould, A., Kozlowski, Szymon, Miyake, N., Gaudi, B. S., Bennett, D. P., Abe, F., Gilmore, A. C., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Sato, S., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Sweatman, W., Tristram, P. J., Yock, P. C. M., Bolt, G., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Han, C., Janczak, J., Lee, C. -U., Mallia, F., McCormick, J., Monard, B., Maury, A., Natusch, T., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Santallo, R., Stanek, K. Z., Udalski, A., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Szewczyk, O., Wyrzykowski, L., and Ulaczyk, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of the cool, Jovian-mass planet MOA-2007-BLG-400Lb. The planet was detected in a high-magnification microlensing event (with peak magnification A_max = 628) in which the primary lens transited the source, resulting in a dramatic smoothing of the peak of the event. The angular extent of the region of perturbation due to the planet is significantly smaller than the angular size of the source, and as a result the planetary signature is also smoothed out by the finite source size. Thus the deviation from a single-lens fit is broad and relatively weak (~ few percent). Nevertheless, we demonstrate that the planetary nature of the deviation can be unambiguously ascertained from the gross features of the residuals, and detailed analysis yields a fairly precise planet/star mass ratio of q = 0.0026+/-0.0004, in accord with the large significance (\Delta\chi^2=1070) of the detection. The planet/star projected separation is subject to a strong close/wide degeneracy, leading to two indistinguishable solutions that differ in separation by a factor of ~8.5. Upper limits on flux from the lens constrain its mass to be M < 0.75 M_Sun (assuming it is a main-sequence star). A Bayesian analysis that includes all available observational constraints indicates a primary in the Galactic bulge with a mass of ~0.2-0.5 M_Sun and thus a planet mass of ~ 0.5-1.3 M_Jupiter. The separation and equilibrium temperature are ~0.6-1.1AU (~5.3-9.7AU) and ~103K (~34K) for the close (wide) solution. If the primary is a main-sequence star, follow-up observations would enable the detection of its light and so a measurement of its mass and distance., Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to ApJ
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- 2008
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39. A Low-Mass Planet with a Possible Sub-Stellar-Mass Host in Microlensing Event MOA-2007-BLG-192
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Bennett, D. P., Bond, I. A., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Abe, F., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Holderness, S., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Korpela, A. V., Kilmartin, P. M., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Miyake, N., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Okumura, T., Ohnishi, K., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N. J., Sako, T., Saito, To., Sato, S., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sweatman, W. L., Tristram, P. J., Yock, P. C. M., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Szewczyk, O., Wyrzykowski, L., Ulaczyk, K., Batista, V., Beaulieu, J. P., Brillant, S., Cassan, A., Fouque, P., Kervella, P., Kubas, D., and Marquette, J. B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of an extrasolar planet of mass ratio q ~ 2 x 10^(-4) in microlensing event MOA-2007-BLG-192. The best fit microlensing model shows both the microlensing parallax and finite source effects, and these can be combined to obtain the lens masses of M = 0.060 (+0.028 -0.021) M_sun for the primary and m = 3.3 (+4.9 -1.6) M_earth for the planet. However, the observational coverage of the planetary deviation is sparse and incomplete, and the radius of the source was estimated without the benefit of a source star color measurement. As a result, the 2-sigma limits on the mass ratio and finite source measurements are weak. Nevertheless, the microlensing parallax signal clearly favors a sub-stellar mass planetary host, and the measurement of finite source effects in the light curve supports this conclusion. Adaptive optics images taken with the Very Large Telescope (VLT) NACO instrument are consistent with a lens star that is either a brown dwarf or a star at the bottom of the main sequence. Follow-up VLT and/or Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations will either confirm that the primary is a brown dwarf or detect the low-mass lens star and enable a precise determination of its mass. In either case, the lens star, MOA-2007-BLG-192L, is the lowest mass primary known to have a companion with a planetary mass ratio, and the planet, MOA-2007-BLG-192Lb, is probably the lowest mass exoplanet found to date, aside from the lowest mass pulsar planet., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Scheduled for the Sept. 1, 2008 issue
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- 2008
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40. Cold atoms probe the magnetic field near a wire
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Jones, M. P. A., Vale, C. J., Sahagun, D., Hall, B. V., Eberlein, C. C., Sauer, B. E., Furusawa, K., Richardson, D., and Hinds, E. A.
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Condensed Matter - Abstract
A microscopic Ioffe-Pritchard trap is formed using a straight, current-carrying wire, together with suitable auxiliary magnetic fields. By measuring the distribution of cold rubidium atoms held in this trap, we detect a weak magnetic field component $\Delta B_z$ parallel to the wire. This field is proportional to the current in the wire and is approximately periodic along the wire with period $\lambda=230 \mu$m. We find that the decrease of this field with distance from the centre of the wire is well described by the Bessel function $K_1(2\pi y/\lambda)$, as one would expect for the far field of a transversely oscillating current within the wire., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures
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- 2003
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41. Nucleotide specificity of the enzymatic and motile activities of dynein, kinesin, and heavy meromyosin.
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Shimizu, T, Furusawa, K, Ohashi, S, Toyoshima, YY, Okuno, M, Malik, F, and Vale, RD
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological Sciences ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Actins ,Adenosine Triphosphatases ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Animals ,Cattle ,Cell Movement ,Cilia ,Dyneins ,Kinesins ,Microtubules ,Myosin Subfragments ,Substrate Specificity ,Tetrahymena ,Kinesin ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Developmental Biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
The substrate specificities of dynein, kinesin, and myosin substrate turnover activity and cytoskeletal filament-driven translocation were examined using 15 ATP analogues. The dyneins were more selective in their substrate utilization than bovine brain kinesin or muscle heavy meromyosin, and even different types of dyneins, such as 14S and 22S dynein from Tetrahymena cilia and the beta-heavy chain-containing particle from the outer-arm dynein of sea urchin flagella, could be distinguished by their substrate specificities. Although bovine brain kinesin and muscle heavy meromyosin both exhibited broad substrate specificities, kinesin-induced microtubule translocation varied over a 50-fold range in speed among the various substrates, whereas heavy meromyosin-induced actin translocation varied only by fourfold. With both kinesin and heavy meromyosin, the relative velocities of filament translocation did not correlate well with the relative filament-activated substrate turnover rates. Furthermore, some ATP analogues that did not support the filament translocation exhibited filament-activated substrate turnover rates. Filament-activated substrate turnover and power production, therefore, appear to become uncoupled with certain substrates. In conclusion, the substrate specificities and coupling to motility are distinct for different types of molecular motor proteins. Such nucleotide "fingerprints" of enzymatic activities of motor proteins may prove useful as a tool for identifying what type of motor is involved in powering a motility-related event that can be reconstituted in vitro.
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- 1991
42. Albuminuria predicts worsening renal function at 1 month after transcatheter aortic valve implantation
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Tobe, A, primary, Tanaka, A, additional, Tokuda, Y, additional, Shirai, Y, additional, Yamamoto, T, additional, Tokoro, M, additional, Furusawa, K, additional, Ishii, H, additional, Usui, A, additional, and Murohara, T, additional
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- 2022
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43. Heterogeneous carotid plaque is associated with cardiovascular events after percutaneous coronary intervention
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Tobe, A, primary, Tanaka, A, additional, Furusawa, K, additional, Shirai, Y, additional, Funakubo, H, additional, Otsuka, S, additional, Kubota, Y, additional, Kunieda, T, additional, Yoshioka, N, additional, Sato, S, additional, Kudo, N, additional, Ishii, H, additional, and Murohara, T, additional
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- 2022
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44. P291 Effect of the preconception steroid-free remission period on disease activity during pregnancy and birth outcomes in women with Ulcerative Colitis: a retrospective cohort study
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Ikeda, A, primary, Kunisaki, R, additional, Aoki, S, additional, Yaguchi, K, additional, Asami, S, additional, Furusawa, K, additional, Atsusaka, R, additional, Azuma, D, additional, Tsunoda, S, additional, Fujii, K, additional, Nishida, D, additional, Madarame, A, additional, Nishio, M, additional, Ogashiwa, T, additional, Nakamori, Y, additional, Fuse, M, additional, Daibo, S, additional, Araki, K, additional, Kimura, H, additional, Suzuki, R, additional, Go, H, additional, Saigusa, Y, additional, and Maeda, S, additional
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- 2022
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45. Dacron Fabric Enveloped Alumina Ceramic Prosthesis for Large Bone Defects
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Shinjo, K., Asai, T., Okayama, N., Saito, S., Miyake, N., Furusawa, K., Langlais, F., editor, and Tomeno, B., editor
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- 1991
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46. Clinical significance of spleen size in patients with heart failure
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Hiraiwa, H, primary, Okumura, T, additional, Sawamura, A, additional, Kondo, T, additional, Araki, T, additional, Mizutani, T, additional, Kazama, S, additional, Kimura, Y, additional, Shibata, N, additional, Oishi, H, additional, Kuwayama, T, additional, Furusawa, K, additional, Morimoto, R, additional, and Murohara, T, additional
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- 2021
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47. Regression of electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy after transcatheter aortic valve replacement for aortic stenosis
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Tobe, A, primary, Tanaka, A, additional, Tokuda, Y, additional, Akita, S, additional, Fujii, T, additional, Miki, Y, additional, Furusawa, K, additional, Ishii, H, additional, Usui, A, additional, and Murohara, T, additional
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- 2021
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48. Incidental findings on computed tomography for preoperative assessment before transcatheter aortic valve implantation in japanese patients
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Tobe, A, primary, Tanaka, A, additional, Tokuda, Y, additional, Akita, S, additional, Fujii, T, additional, Miki, Y, additional, Furusawa, K, additional, Ishii, H, additional, Usui, A, additional, and Murohara, T, additional
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- 2021
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49. The Respiratory Quotient of the Excess Metabolism of Exercise
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Best, C. H., Furusawa, K., and Ridout, J. H.
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- 1929
50. The Energy Used in "Sprint" Running
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Furusawa, K., Hill, A. V., and Parkinson, J. L.
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- 1927
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