SIMBAD references

2018AJ....155..121M - Astron. J., 155, 121-121 (2018)

A Neptune-mass free-floating planet candidate discovered by microlensing surveys.

MROZ P., RYU Y.-H., SKOWRON J., UDALSKI A., GOULD A., SZYMANSKI M.K., SOSZYNSKI I., POLESKI R., PIETRUKOWICZ P., KOZLOWSKI S., PAWLAK M., ULACZYK K. (The OGLE Collaboration), ALBROW M.D., CHUNG S.-J., JUNG Y.K., HAN C., HWANG K.-H., SHIN I.-G., YEE J.C., ZHU W., CHA S.-M., KIM D.-J., KIM H.-W., KIM S.-L., LEE C.-U., LEE D.-J., LEE Y., PARK B.-G., POGGE R.W. (The KMTNet Collaboration)

Abstract (from CDS):

Current microlensing surveys are sensitive to free-floating planets down to Earth-mass objects. All published microlensing events attributed to unbound planets were identified based on their short timescale (below two days), but lacked an angular Einstein radius measurement (and hence lacked a significant constraint on the lens mass). Here, we present the discovery of a Neptune-mass free-floating planet candidate in the ultrashort (tE = 0.320 ± 0.003 days) microlensing event OGLE-2016-BLG-1540. The event exhibited strong finite-source effects, which allowed us to measure its angular Einstein radius of θE = 9.2 ± 0.5 µas. There remains, however, a degeneracy between the lens mass and distance. The combination of the source proper motion and source-lens relative proper motion measurements favors a Neptune-mass lens located in the Galactic disk. However, we cannot rule out that the lens is a Saturn-mass object belonging to the bulge population. We exclude stellar companions up to ∼15 au.

Abstract Copyright: © 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): gravitational lensing: micro - planets and satellites: detection

Simbad objects: 6

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