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OGLE-2014-BLG-0319: A Sub-Jupiter-Mass Planetary Event Encountered Degeneracy with Different Mass Ratios and Lens-Source Relative Proper Motions

Authors :
Miyazaki, Shota
Suzuki, Daisuke
Udalski, Andrzej
Koshimoto, Naoki
Bennett, David P.
Rattenbury, Nicholas J.
Sumi, Takahiro
Abe, Fumio
Barry, Richard K.
Bhattacharya, Aparna
Bond, Ian A.
Fukui, Akihiko
Fujii, Hirosane
Hirao, Yuki
Silva, Stela
Itow, Yoshitaka
Kirikawa, Rintaro
Kondo, Iona
Munford, Brandon
Matsubara, Y.
Matsumoto, Sho
Muraki, Yasushi
Okamura, Arisa
Olmschenk, Greg
Ranc, Clément
Satoh, Yuki K.
Toda, Taiga
Tristram, P. J.
Yama, Hibiki
Yonehara, A.
Poleski, Radek
Mroz, Przemek
Skowron, Jan
Szymanski, Michal
Soszynski, Igor
Pietrukowicz, Pawel
Kozlowski, Syzmon
Ulaczyk, Krzysztof
Wyrzykowski, Lukasz
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We report the discovery of a sub-Jovian-mass planet, OGLE-2014-BLG-0319Lb. The characteristics of this planet will be added into a future extended statistical analysis of the Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics (MOA) collaboration. The planetary anomaly of the light curve is characterized by MOA and OGLE survey observations and results in three degenerate models with different planetary mass-ratios of $q=(10.3,6.6,4.5)\times10^{-4}$, respectively. We find that the last two models require unreasonably small lens-source relative proper motions of $\mu_{\rm rel}\sim1\;{\rm mas/yr}$. Considering Galactic prior probabilities, we rule out these two models from the final result. We conduct a Bayesian analysis to estimate physical properties of the lens system using a Galactic model and find that the lens system is composed of a $0.49^{+0.35}_{-0.27}\;M_{\rm Jup}$ sub-Jovian planet orbiting a $0.47^{+0.33}_{-0.25}\; M_{\odot}$ M-dwarf near the Galactic bulge. This analysis demonstrates that Galactic priors are useful to resolve this type of model degeneracy. This is important for estimating the mass ratio function statistically. However, this method would be unlikely successful in shorter timescale events, which are mostly due to low-mass objects, like brown dwarfs or free-floating planets. Therefore, careful treatment is needed for estimating the mass ratio function of the companions around such low-mass hosts which only the microlensing can probe.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2112.14997
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac4960