• Title/Summary/Keyword: planets and satellites: detection

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CLOSE/WIDE DEGENERACY IN CENTRAL PERTURBATIONS OF PLANETARY LENSING

  • Kim, Do-Eon;Han, Cheong-Ho;Park, Byeong-Gon
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.42 no.3
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    • pp.39-45
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    • 2009
  • We investigate the degeneracy in the pattern of central microlensing perturbations of a pair of planetary systems where the planets are located from the primary with projected separations in units of the Einstein radius s and $s^{-1}$, respectively. From this, we confirm the fact that although alike, the patterns of central perturbations induced by a close (s < 1) planet and a wide (s > 1) planet are not identical and the degree of difference depends on the planet/primary mass ratio and the planet-primary separation. We find that the difference can be greater than 5% for planetary systems with lensing parameters located in the parameter space of (1/1.8 < |s| < 1.8, q > $5{\times}10^{-3}$), (1/1.3 < |s| < 1.3, q > $1{\times}10^{-3}$), and (1/1.2 < |s| < 1.2, q > $5{\times}10^{-4}$), where q represents the planet/primary mass ratio. Although this range occupies a small fraction of the entire parameter space of planetary systems, we predict that the chance of resolving the close/wide degeneracy would not be meager considering that the planet detection efficiency is higher for planets with resonant separations (s $\sim$ 1) and heavier masses. We also find that the differences between the perturbation patterns are basically caused by the effect of the planetary caustic. This explains the tendency of the perturbation difference where (1) the difference increases as the planet/primary mass ratio increases and the separation approaches the Einstein radius, (2) the region of major difference is confined within the region around the line connecting the central and the planetary caustics, and (3) a wide (close) planetary system has a more extended central perturbation region toward the (opposite) direction of the planet.

FREE-FLOATING PLANETS, THE EINSTEIN DESERT, AND 'OUMUAMUA

  • Gould, Andrew;Jung, Youn Kil;Hwang, Kyu-Ha;Dong, Subo;Albrow, Michael D.;Chung, Sun-Ju;Han, Cheongho;Ryu, Yoon-Hyun;Shin, In-Gu;Shvartzvald, Yossi;Yang, Hongjing;Yee, Jennifer C.;Zang, Weicheng;Cha, Sang-Mok;Kim, Dong-Jin;Kim, Seung-Lee;Lee, Chung-Uk;Lee, Dong-Joo;Lee, Yongseok;Park, Byeong-Gon;Pogge, Richard W.
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.55 no.5
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    • pp.173-194
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    • 2022
  • We complete the survey for finite-source/point-lens (FSPL) giant-source events in 2016-2019 KMTNet microlensing data. The 30 FSPL events show a clear gap in Einstein radius, 9 𝜇as < 𝜃E < 26 𝜇as, which is consistent with the gap in Einstein timescales near tE ~ 0.5 days found by Mróz et al. (2017) in an independent sample of point-source/point-lens (PSPL) events. We demonstrate that the two surveys are consistent. We estimate that the 4 events below this gap are due to a power-law distribution of free-floating planet candidates (FFPs) dNFFP/d log M = (0.4 ± 0.2) (M/38 M)-p/star, with 0.9 ≲ p ≲ 1.2. There are substantially more FFPs than known bound planets, implying that the bound planet power-law index 𝛾 = 0.6 is likely shaped by the ejection process at least as much as by formation. The mass density per decade of FFPs in the Solar neighborhood is of the same order as that of 'Oumuamua-like objects. In particular, if we assume that 'Oumuamua is part of the same process that ejected the FFPs to very wide or unbound orbits, the power-law index is p = 0.89 ± 0.06. If the Solar System's endowment of Neptune-mass objects in Neptune-like orbits is typical, which is consistent with the results of Poleski et al. (2021), then these could account for a substantial fraction of the FFPs in the Neptune-mass range.

SEARCHING FOR TRANSIT TIMING VARIATIONS AND FITTING A NEW EPHEMERIS TO TRANSITS OF TRES-1 B

  • Yeung, Paige;Perian, Quinn;Robertson, Peyton;Fitzgerald, Michael;Fowler, Martin;Sienkiewicz, Frank;Tock, Kalee
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.55 no.4
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    • pp.111-121
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    • 2022
  • Based on the light an exoplanet blocks from its host star as it passes in front of it during a transit, the mid-transit time can be determined. Periodic variations in mid-transit times can indicate another planet's gravitational influence. We investigate 83 transits of TrES-1 b as observed from 6-inch telescopes in the MicroObservatory robotic telescope network. The EXOTIC data reduction pipeline is used to process these transits, fit transit models to light curves, and calculate transit midpoints. This paper details the methodology for analyzing transit timing variations (TTVs) and using transit measurements to maintain ephemerides. The application of Lomb-Scargle period analysis for studying the plausibility of TTVs is explained. The analysis of the resultant TTVs from 46 transits from MicroObservatory and 47 transits from archival data in the Exoplanet Transit Database indicated the possible existence of other planets affecting the orbit of TrES-1 and improved the precision of the ephemeris by one order of magnitude. We now estimate the ephemeris to be (2 455 489.66026 BJDTDB ± 0.00044 d) + (3.0300689 ± 0.0000007) d × epoch. This analysis also demonstrates the role of small telescopes in making precise midtransit time measurements, which can be used to help maintain ephemerides and perform TTV analysis. The maintenance of ephemerides allows for an increased ability to optimize telescope time on large ground-based telescopes and space telescope missions.

KMT-2016-BLG-0212: FIRST KMTNET-ONLY DISCOVERY OF A SUBSTELLAR COMPANION

  • Hwang, K.H.;Kim, H.W.;Kim, D.J.;Gould, A.;Albrow, M.D.;Chung, S.J.;Han, C.;Jung, Y.K.;Ryu, Y.H.;Shin, I.G.;Shvartzvald, Y.;Yee, J.C.;Zang, W.;Zhu, W.;Cha, S.M.;Kim, S.L.;Lee, C.U.;Lee, D.J.;Lee, Y.;Park, B.G.;Pogge, R.W.
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.51 no.6
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    • pp.197-206
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    • 2018
  • We present the analysis of KMT-2016-BLG-0212, a low flux-variation ($I_{flux-var}{\sim}20mag$) microlensing event, which is in a high-cadence (${\Gamma}=4hr^{-1}$) field of the three-telescope Korea Microlensing Telescope Network (KMTNet) survey. The event shows a short anomaly that is incompletely covered due to the brief visibility intervals that characterize the early microlensing season when the anomaly occurred. We show that the data are consistent with two classes of solutions, characterized respectively by low-mass brown-dwarf (q = 0.037) and sub-Neptune (q < $10^{-4}$) companions. Future high-resolution imaging should easily distinguish between these solutions.