1,122 research outputs found
Ogle-2018-blg-0677lb: A super earth near the galactic bulge
We report the analysis of the microlensing event OGLE-2018-BLG-0677. A small
feature in the light curve of the event leads to the discovery that the lens is
a star-planet system. Although there are two degenerate solutions that could
not be distinguished for this event, both lead to a similar planet-host mass
ratio. We perform a Bayesian analysis based on a Galactic model to obtain the
properties of the system and find that the planet corresponds to a
super-Earth/sub-Neptune with a mass . The host star has a mass . The projected
separation for the inner and outer solutions are ~AU
and ~AU respectively. At , this is by far the lowest for any
securely-detected microlensing planet to date, a feature that is closely
connected to the fact that it is detected primarily via a "dip" rather than a
"bump".Comment: 15 page, 12 figures, Published in A
OGLE-2018-BLG-0532Lb: Cold Neptune With Possible Jovian Sibling
We report the discovery of the planet OGLE-2018-BLG-0532Lb, with very obvious
signatures in the light curve that lead to an estimate of the planet-host mass
ratio . Although there are
no obvious systematic residuals to this double-lens/single-source (2L1S) fit,
we find that can be significantly improved by adding either a third
lens (3L1S, ) or second source (2L2S, ) to
the lens-source geometry. After thorough investigation, we conclude that we
cannot decisively distinguish between these two scenarios and therefore focus
on the robustly-detected planet. However, given the possible presence of a
second planet, we investigate to what degree and with what probability such
additional planets may affect seemingly single-planet light curves. Our best
estimates for the properties of the lens star and the secure planet are: a host
mass , system distance kpc and planet mass
with projected separation au.
However, there is a relatively bright (and also relatively blue) star
projected within mas of the lens, and if future high-resolution images
show that this is coincident with the lens, then it is possible that it is the
lens, in which case, the lens would be both more massive and more distant than
the best-estimated values above.Comment: 48 pages, 9 figures, 7 table
Evaluating the Cost of Enforcement by Agent-Based Simulation:A Wireless Mobile Grid Example
The subject of this paper is the cost of enforcement, to which we take a satisficing approach through the examination of marginal cost-benefit ratios. Social simulation is used to establish that less enforcement can be beneficial overall in economic terms, depending on the costs to system and/or stakeholders arising from enforcement. The results are demonstrated by means of a case study of wireless mobile grids (WMGs). In such systems the dominant strategy for economically rational users is to free-ride, i.e. to benefit from the system without contributing to it. We examine the use of enforcement agents that police the system and punish users that take but do not give. The agent-based simulation shows that a certain proportion of enforcement agents increases cooperation in WMG architectures. The novelty of the results lies in our empirical evidence for the diminishing marginal utility of enforcement agents: that is how much defection they can foreclose at what cost. We show that an increase in the number of enforcement agents does not always increase the overall benefits-cost ratio, but that with respect to satisficing, a minimum proportion of enforcement agents can be identified that yields the best results. © 2013 Springer-Verlag
Spectroscopic Mass and Host-star Metallicity Measurements for Newly Discovered Microlensing Planet OGLE-2018-BLG-0740Lb
We report the discovery of the microlensing planet OGLE-2018-BLG-0740Lb. The
planet is detected with a very strong signal of , but
the interpretation of the signal suffers from two types of degeneracies. One
type is caused by the previously known close/wide degeneracy, and the other is
caused by an ambiguity between two solutions, in which one solution requires to
incorporate finite-source effects, while the other solution is consistent with
a point-source interpretation. Although difficult to be firmly resolved based
on only the photometric data, the degeneracy is resolved in strong favor of the
point-source solution with the additional external information obtained from
astrometric and spectroscopic observations. The small astrometric offset
between the source and baseline object supports that the blend is the lens and
this interpretation is further secured by the consistency of the spectroscopic
distance estimate of the blend with the lensing parameters of the point-source
solution. The estimated mass of the host is and the mass
of the planet is (close solution) or (wide solution) and the lens is located at a distance of ~kpc.
The bright nature of the lens, with (), combined with
its dominance of the observed flux suggest that radial-velocity (RV) follow-up
observations of the lens can be done using high-resolution spectrometers
mounted on large telescopes, e.g., VLT/ESPRESSO, and this can potentially not
only measure the period and eccentricity of the planet but also probe for
close-in planets. We estimate that the expected RV amplitude would be .Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, 4 table
OGLE-2018-BLG-0022: First Prediction of an Astrometric Microlensing Signal from a Photometric Microlensing Event
In this work, we present the analysis of the binary microlensing event
OGLE-2018-BLG-0022 that is detected toward the Galactic bulge field. The dense
and continuous coverage with the high-quality photometry data from ground-based
observations combined with the space-based {\it Spitzer} observations of this
long time-scale event enables us to uniquely determine the masses and of the individual lens components.
Because the lens-source relative parallax and the vector lens-source relative
proper motion are unambiguously determined, we can likewise unambiguously
predict the astrometric offset between the light centroid of the magnified
images (as observed by the {\it Gaia} satellite) and the true position of the
source. This prediction can be tested when the individual-epoch {\it Gaia}
astrometric measurements are released.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
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