179 research outputs found
Confirmation of the Planetary Microlensing Signal and Star and Planet Mass Determinations for Event OGLE-2005-BLG-169
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3)
observations of the source and lens stars for planetary microlensing event
OGLE-2005-BLG-169, which confirm the relative proper motion prediction due to
the planetary light curve signal observed for this event. This (and the
companion Keck result) provide the first confirmation of a planetary
microlensing signal, for which the deviation was only 2%. The follow-up
observations determine the flux of the planetary host star in multiple
passbands and remove light curve model ambiguity caused by sparse sampling of
part of the light curve. This leads to a precise determination of the
properties of the OGLE-2005-BLG-169Lb planetary system. Combining the
constraints from the microlensing light curve with the photometry and
astrometry of the HST/WFC3 data, we find star and planet masses of M_* = 0.69+-
0.02 M_solar and m_p = 14.1 +- 0.9 M_earth. The planetary microlens system is
located toward the Galactic bulge at a distance of D_L = 4.1 +- 0.4 kpc, and
the projected star-planet separation is a_perp = 3.5 +- 0.3 AU, corresponding
to a semi-major axis of a = 4.0 (+2.2 -0.6) AU.Comment: 21 pages, including 5 figures, published in Ap
The All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) Light Curve Server v1.0
The All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) is working towards
imaging the entire visible sky every night to a depth of V~17 mag. The present
data covers the sky and spans ~2-5~years with ~100-400 epochs of observation.
The data should contain some ~1 million variable sources, and the ultimate goal
is to have a database of these observations publicly accessible. We describe
here a first step, a simple but unprecedented web interface
https://asas-sn.osu.edu/ that provides an up to date aperture photometry light
curve for any user-selected sky coordinate. Because the light curves are
produced in real time, this web tool is relatively slow and can only be used
for small samples of objects. However, it also imposes no selection bias on the
part of the ASAS-SN team, allowing the user to obtain a light curve for any
point on the celestial sphere. We present the tool, describe its capabilities,
limitations, and known issues, and provide a few illustrative examples.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PAS
Planetary Detection Efficiency of the Magnification 3000 Microlensing Event OGLE-2004-BLG-343
OGLE-2004-BLG-343 was a microlensing event with peak magnification
A_{max}=3000+/-1100, by far the highest-magnification event ever analyzed and
hence potentially extremely sensitive to planets orbiting the lens star. Due to
human error, intensive monitoring did not begin until 43 minutes after peak, at
which point the magnification had fallen to A~1200, still by far the highest
ever observed. As the light curve does not show significant deviations due to a
planet, we place upper limits on the presence of such planets by extending the
method of Yoo et al. (2004b), which combines light-curve analysis with priors
from a Galactic model of the source and lens populations, to take account of
finite-source effects. This is the first event so analyzed for which
finite-source effects are important, and hence we develop two new techniques
for evaluating these effects. Somewhat surprisingly, we find that
OGLE-2004-BLG-343 is no more sensitive to planets than two previously analyzed
events with A_{max}~100, despite the fact that it was observed at ~12 times
higher magnification. However, we show that had the event been observed over
its peak, it would have been sensitive to almost all Neptune-mass planets over
a factor of 5 of projected separation and even would have had some sensitivity
to Earth-mass planets. This shows that some microlensing events being detected
in current experiments are sensitive to very low-mass planets. We also give
suggestions on how extremely high-magnification events can be more promptly
monitored in the future.Comment: 50 pages, 13 figures, published in The Astrophysical Journa
A Second Method to Photometrically Align Multi-Site Microlensing Light Curves: Source Color in Planetary Event MOA-2007-BLG-192
At present, microlensing light curves from different telescopes and filters
are photometrically aligned by fitting them to a common model. We present a
second method based on photometry of common field stars. If two spectral
responses are similar (or the color of the source is known) then this technique
can resolve important ambiguities that frequently arise when predicting the
future course of the event, and that occasionally persist even when the event
is over. Or if the spectral responses are different, it can be used to derive
the color of the source when that is unknown. We present the essential elements
of this technique and apply it to the case of MOA-2007-BLG-192, an important
planetary event for which the system may be a terrestrial planet orbiting a
brown dwarf or very low mass star. The refined estimate of the source color
that we derive here, V-I=2.36 +- 0.03, will aid in making the estimate of the
lens mass more precise.Comment: 16 pages including 3 figures. Submitted to Ap
The Effect of Differential Limb Magnification on Abundance Analysis of Microlensed Dwarf Stars
Finite source effects can be important in observations of gravitational
microlensing of stars. Near caustic crossings, for example, some parts of the
source star will be more highly magnified than other parts. The spectrum of the
star is then no longer the same as when it is unmagnified, and measurements of
the atmospheric parameters and abundances will be affected. The accuracy of
abundances measured from spectra taken during microlensing events has become
important recently because of the use of highly magnified dwarf stars to probe
abundance ratios and the abundance distribution in the Galactic bulge. In this
paper, we investigate the effect of finite source effects on spectra by using
magnification profiles motivated by two events to synthesize spectra for dwarfs
between 5000K to 6200K at solar metallicity. We adopt the usual techniques for
analyzing the microlensed dwarfs, namely, spectroscopic determination of
temperature, gravity, and microturbulent velocity, relying on equivalent
widths. We find that ignoring the finite source effects for the more extreme
case results in errors in Teff < 45K, in log g of <0.1 dex and in
microturbulent velocity of <0.1 km/s. In total, changes in equivalent widths
lead to small changes in atmospheric parameters and changes in abundances of
<0.06 dex, with changes in [FeI/H] of <0.03 dex. For the case with a larger
source-lens separation, the error in [FeI/H] is <0.01 dex. This latter case
represents the maximum effect seen in events whose lightcurves are consistent
with a point-source lens, which includes the majority of microlensed bulge
dwarfs published so far.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, submitted to Ap
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