6533b823fe1ef96bd127e182

RESEARCH PRODUCT

MOA-2011-BLG-293Lb: A test of pure survey microlensing planet detections

In-gu ShinK. FurusawaI. FinkelmanJack D. DrummondEvgeny GorbikovJ. A. MuñozLeonardo A. AlmeidaK. OhnishiSzymon KozłowskiCalen B. HendersonDenis J. SullivanDaisuke SuzukiD. MaozFumio AbeDarren L. DepoyWilliam H. AllenDavid P. BennettTim NatuschTo. SaitoKimiaki MasudaD. MoorhouseAndrew GouldYoshitaka ItowC. H. LingAndrzej UdalskiMichał K. SzymańskiV. BatistaR. SantalloJ.-y. ChoiChang S. HanJennifer C. YeeN. MiyakeB. S. GaudiL. A. G. MonardP. J. TristramGrzegorz PietrzyńskiGrzegorz PietrzyńskiShai KaspiNicholas J. RattenburyJan SkowronKantaro OhmoriYossi ShvartzvaldH. NganD. HigginsRichard W. PoggeYutaka MatsubaraIan A. BondAvishay Gal-yamEran O. OfekKrzysztof UlaczykC.-u. LeeM. FreemanC. S. BotzlerAkihiko FukuiIlan ManulisG. ThornleySubo DongM. KubiakYasushi MurakiKazuyoshi SuzukiK. WadaŁUkasz WyrzykowskiŁUkasz WyrzykowskiS. KobaraPaul ChoteFrancisco JablonskiWinston L. SweatmanIgor SoszyńskiJennie MccormickM. BosG. W. ChristieP. PietrukowiczRadosław PoleskiS. TakinoJ.-r. KooTakahiro SumiThiam-guan TanS.-y. ParkD. Mcgregor

subject

PhysicsEarth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)010308 nuclear & particles physicsAstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsGravitational microlensing01 natural sciencesTest (assessment)Graduate researchStarsSpace and Planetary SciencePlanet0103 physical sciences010303 astronomy & astrophysicsAstrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics

description

Because of the development of large-format, wide-field cameras, microlensing surveys are now able to monitor millions of stars with sufficient cadence to detect planets. These new discoveries will span the full range of significance levels including planetary signals too small to be distinguished from the noise. At present, we do not understand where the threshold is for detecting planets. MOA-2011-BLG-293Lb is the first planet to be published from the new surveys, and it also has substantial followup observations. This planet is robustly detected in survey+followup data (Delta chi^2 ~ 5400). The planet/host mass ratio is q=5.3+/- 0.2*10^{-3}. The best fit projected separation is s=0.548+/- 0.005 Einstein radii. However, due to the s-->s^{-1} degeneracy, projected separations of s^{-1} are only marginally disfavored at Delta chi^2=3. A Bayesian estimate of the host mass gives M_L = 0.43^{+0.27}_{-0.17} M_Sun, with a sharp upper limit of M_L < 1.2 M_Sun from upper limits on the lens flux. Hence, the planet mass is m_p=2.4^{+1.5}_{-0.9} M_Jup, and the physical projected separation is either r_perp = ~1.0 AU or r_perp = ~3.4 AU. We show that survey data alone predict this solution and are able to characterize the planet, but the Delta chi^2 is much smaller (Delta chi^2~500) than with the followup data. The Delta chi^2 for the survey data alone is smaller than for any other securely detected planet. This event suggests a means to probe the detection threshold, by analyzing a large sample of events like MOA-2011-BLG-293, which have both followup data and high cadence survey data, to provide a guide for the interpretation of pure survey microlensing data.

https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1201.1002