2004
DOI: 10.1086/420928
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OGLE 2003-BLG-235/MOA 2003-BLG-53: A Planetary Microlensing Event

Abstract: We present observations of the unusual microlensing event OGLE 2003-BLG-235/MOA 2003-BLG-53. In this event a short duration (∼7 days) low amplitude deviation in the light curve due a single lens profile was observed in both the MOA and OGLE survey observations. We find that the observed features of the light curve can only be reproduced using a binary microlensing model with an extreme (planetary) mass ratio of 0.0039 +11 −07 for the lensing system. If the lens system comprises a main

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Cited by 349 publications
(236 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(23 reference statements)
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“…This can be quantified by simulating planetary light curves with different values of q and v (where v is the angle of source motion with respect to the lens axis) but the remaining parameters are fixed to the values for the three known microlensing planets. We find that the probability of detecting a q < 4-7 £ 10 23 planet, like the first two microlens planets 13,14 , is ,50 times larger than the probability of detecting a q ¼ 7.6 £ 10 25 planet like OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb. This suggests that, at the orbital separations probed by microlensing, sub-Neptune-mass planets are significantly more common than large gas giants around the most common stars in our Galaxy.…”
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confidence: 71%
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“…This can be quantified by simulating planetary light curves with different values of q and v (where v is the angle of source motion with respect to the lens axis) but the remaining parameters are fixed to the values for the three known microlensing planets. We find that the probability of detecting a q < 4-7 £ 10 23 planet, like the first two microlens planets 13,14 , is ,50 times larger than the probability of detecting a q ¼ 7.6 £ 10 25 planet like OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb. This suggests that, at the orbital separations probed by microlensing, sub-Neptune-mass planets are significantly more common than large gas giants around the most common stars in our Galaxy.…”
mentioning
confidence: 71%
“…The PLANET collaboration 12 maintains the high sampling rate required to detect low-mass planets while monitoring the most promising of the .500 microlensing events discovered annually by the OGLE collaboration, as well as events discovered by MOA. A decade of pioneering microlensing searches has resulted in the recent detections of two Jupiter-mass extrasolar planets 13,14 with orbital separations of a few AU by the combined observations of the OGLE, MOA, MicroFUN and PLANET collaborations. The absence of perturbations to stellar microlensing events can be used to constrain the presence of planetary lens companions.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…At larger separations, microlensing surveys similarly probe the frequency of planets as a function of their mass. That technique has detected four putative planets that are probably orbiting M dwarfs : OGLE235-MOA53b (m p ∼ 2.6 M Jup - Bond et al 2004;Bennett et al 2006), OGLE-05-071Lb (m p = 0.9 M Jup - Udalski et al 2005), OGLE-05-390Lb (m p = 0.017 M Jup - Beaulieu et al 2006), and OGLE-05-169Lb (m p = 0.04 M Jup - Gould et al 2006). Two of these four planets very likely have masses below 0.1 M Jup .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This has been done already for several microlensing events where the system is composed of a star and a gaseous planet (Bond et al 2004;Bennett et al 2006;Udalski et al 2005;Dong et al 2009;Gaudi et al 2008;Janczak et al 2010). We observed MOA-2007-BLG-192 in JHK using adaptive optics on the VLT while it was still amplified by a factor of 1.23 and again when the microlensing was over.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 84%