6533b833fe1ef96bd129b7f9
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A brown dwarf orbiting an M-dwarf:MOA 2009-BLG-411L
Stefan DreizlerMichael D. AlbrowAndrew WilliamsDaisuke SuzukiJ. JanczakArnaud CassanJesper SkottfeltJ. B. MarquetteS. R. KaneC. LiebigC. LiebigSohrab RahvarSohrab RahvarMartin BurgdorfMartin BurgdorfMartin BurgdorfDavid M. NatafK. WadaYasushi MurakiLuigi ManciniLuigi ManciniLuigi ManciniN. MiyakeD. Dominis PresterNagisa OiPascal FouquéT. A. ListerIan A. BondM. ZubK. R. PollardJoachim WambsganssDavid HeyrovskýC.-u. LeeK. B. W. HarpsøeKeith HorneKeith HorneG. W. ChristieSubo DongU. G. JørgensenYiannis TsaprasYiannis TsaprasFumio AbeD. M. BramichJohn A. R. CaldwellJ. DonatowiczP. J. TristramN. R. ClayRichard W. PoggeM. HundertmarkYutaka MatsubaraAndrzej UdalskiGaetano ScarpettaByeong-gon ParkS. DietersM. GlitrupK. H. CookAkihiko FukuiAndrew GouldTobias C. HinseTobias C. HinseTobias C. HinseAvi ShporerD. MaozD. MaozKouji OhnishiD. P. BennettTakahiro SumiN. KainsN. KainsN. KainsC. J. MottramM. BosF. FinetL. A. G. MonardP. BrowneN. RenonNicholas J. RattenburyNicholas J. RattenburyEamonn KerinsR. M. MartinDavide RicciC. H. LingJohn B. HearnshawMartin DominikJ. P. BeaulieuE. HawkinsKimiaki MasudaAlasdair AllanS. Calchi NovatiJohn SouthworthA. V. KorpelaTo. SaitoPeter J. WheatleyNoriyuki MatsunagaChang S. HanChang S. HanJ. W. MenziesB. S. GaudiE. BertinValerio BozzaJean SurdejShai KaspiDenis J. SullivanColin SnodgrassIain A. SteeleC. S. BotzlerTim NatuschTim NatuschDavid PolishookS. BrillantYoshitaka ItowFrederic V. HessmanDavid S. GraffJ. MccormickS. KozłowskiS. KozłowskiM. MathiasenF. ZimmerRachel StreetRachel StreetJennifer C. YeeFrank GrundahlJack D. DrummondEtienne BacheletAndrew A. ColeM. F. BodeV. BatistaKailash C. SahuG. MaierE. S. SaundersE. S. SaundersWinston L. SweatmanJ. G. GreenhillC. CouturesJ. A. MuñozS. N. FraserK. Furusawasubject
Brown dwarfContext (language use)Astrophysicsgravitational lensing: microAstrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic AstrophysicsGravitational microlensing01 natural sciencesSettore FIS/05 - Astronomia e AstrofisicaPlanet0103 physical sciencesAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics010303 astronomy & astrophysicsAstrophysics::Galaxy AstrophysicsPhysicsstars: individual: MOA 2009-BLG-411L010308 nuclear & particles physicsAstronomyMOA 2009-BLG-411L; gravitational lensing; starsAstronomy and AstrophysicsRadiusLight curveGalaxyGravitational lensbinaries: generalSpace and Planetary ScienceAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysicsbinaries: general; gravitational lensing: micro; stars: individual: MOA 2009-BLG-411Ldescription
Context. Caustic crossing is the clearest signature of binary lenses in microlensing. In the present context, this signature is diluted by the large source star but a detailed analysis has allowed the companion signal to be extracted.Aims. MOA 2009-BLG-411 was detected on August 5, 2009 by the MOA-Collaboration. Alerted as a high-magnification event, it was sensitive to planets. Suspected anomalies in the light curve were not confirmed by a real-time model, but further analysis revealed small deviations from a single lens extended source fit.Methods. Thanks to observations by all the collaborations, this event was well monitored. We first decided to characterize the source star properties by using a more refined method than the classical one: we measure the interstellar absorption along the line of sight in five different passbands (VIJHK). Secondly, we model the lightcurve by using the standard technique: make (s,q,α) grids to look for local minima and refine the results by using a downhill method (Markov chain Monte Carlo). Finally, we use a Galactic model to estimate the physical properties of the lens components.Results. We find that the source star is a giant G star with radius 9 R⊙. The grid search gives two local minima, which correspond to the theoretical degeneracy s ≡ s-1. We find that the lens is composed of a brown dwarf secondary of mass MS = 0.05 M⊙ orbiting a primary M-star of mass MP = 0.18 M⊙. We also reveal a new mass-ratio degeneracy for the central caustics of close binaries.Conclusions. As far as we are aware, this is the first detection using the microlensing technique of a binary system in our Galaxy composed of an M-star and a brown dwarf. Context. Caustic crossing is the clearest signature of binary lenses in microlensing. In the present context, this signature is diluted by the large source star but a detailed analysis has allowed the companion signal to be extracted. Aims. MOA 2009-BLG-411 was detected on August 5, 2009 by the MOA-Collaboration. Alerted as a high-magnification event, it was sensitive to planets. Suspected anomalies in the light curve were not confirmed by a real-time model, but further analysis revealed small deviations from a single lens extended source fit. Methods. Thanks to observations by all the collaborations, this event was well monitored. We first decided to characterize the source star properties by using a more refined method than the classical one: we measure the interstellar absorption along the line of sight in five different passbands (VIJHK). Secondly, we model the lightcurve by using the standard technique: make (s,q,α) grids to look for local minima and refine the results by using a downhill method (Markov chain Monte Carlo). Finally, we use a Galactic model to estimate the physical properties of the lens components. Results. We find that the source star is a giant G star with radius 9 R . The grid search gives two local minima, which correspond to the theoretical degeneracy s s . We find that the lens is composed of a brown dwarf secondary of mass M = 0.05 M orbiting a primary M-star of mass M = 0.18 M . We also reveal a new mass-ratio degeneracy for the central caustics of close binaries. Conclusions. As far as we are aware, this is the first detection using the microlensing technique of a binary system in our Galaxy composed of an M-star and a brown dwarf.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-10-25 |