OGLE-2017-BLG-1522: A giant planet around a brown dwarf located in the Galactic bulge

Abstract

We report the discovery of a giant planet in the OGLE-2017-BLG-1522 microlensing event. The planetary perturbations were clearly identified by high-cadence survey experiments despite the relatively short event timescale of t E 7.5 days. The Einstein radius is unusually small, θ E = 0.065\,mas, implying that the lens system either has very low mass or lies much closer to the microlensed source than the Sun, or both. A Bayesian analysis yields component masses (M host, M planet)=(46-25+79, 0.75-0.40+1.26)~M J and source-lens distance D LS = 0.99-0.54+0.91~ kpc, implying that this is a brown-dwarf/Jupiter system that probably lies in the Galactic bulge, a location that is also consistent with the relatively low lens-source relative proper motion μ = 3.2 0.5~ mas~ yr-1. The projected companion-host separation is 0.59-0.11+0.12~ AU, indicating that the planet is placed beyond the snow line of the host, i.e., asl 0.12~ AU. Planet formation scenarios combined with the small companion-host mass ratio q 0.016 and separation suggest that the companion could be the first discovery of a giant planet that formed in a protoplanetary disk around a brown dwarf host.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…