OGLE-2005-BLG-071Lb, the Most Massive M-Dwarf Planetary Companion?
Subo Dong, Andrew Gould, Andrzej Udalski, Jay Anderson, G.W. Christie,, B.S. Gaudi, M. Jaroszynski, M. Kubiak, M.K. Szymanski, G. Pietrzynski, I., Soszynski, O. Szewczyk, K. Ulaczyk, L. Wyrzykowski, D.L. DePoy, D.B. Fox, A., Gal-Yam, C. Han, S. Lepine, J. McCormick, E. Ofek

TL;DR
This paper constrains the nature of the second microlensing-discovered planet, OGLE-2005-BLG-071Lb, suggesting it is a massive planet orbiting an M dwarf, with implications for planetary formation theories.
Contribution
It combines multi-source observational data to characterize the host star and planet, providing the first detailed analysis of a high-magnification microlensing event with comprehensive constraints.
Findings
Host is an M dwarf at 3.3 kpc with 0.46 Msun.
Planet has mass ~3.8 M_Jup at ~3.6 AU, temperature ~55 K.
Likely the most massive planet around an M dwarf discovered so far.
Abstract
We combine all available information to constrain the nature of OGLE-2005-BLG-071Lb, the second planet discovered by microlensing and the first in a high-magnification event. These include photometric and astrometric measurements from Hubble Space Telescope, as well as constraints from higher order effects extracted from the ground-based light curve, such as microlens parallax, planetary orbital motion and finite-source effects. Our primary analysis leads to the conclusion that the host of Jovian planet OGLE-2005-BLG-071Lb is an M dwarf in the foreground disk with mass M= 0.46 +/- 0.04 Msun, distance D_l = 3.3 +/- 0.4 kpc, and thick-disk kinematics v_LSR ~ 103 km/s. From the best-fit model, the planet has mass M_p = 3.8 +/- 0.4 M_Jup, lies at a projected separation r_perp = 3.6 +/- 0.2 AU from its host and so has an equilibrium temperature of T ~ 55 K, i.e., similar to Neptune. A…
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