A sub-Saturn Mass Planet, MOA-2009-BLG-319Lb
N. Miyake, T. Sumi, Subo Dong, R. Street, L. Mancini, A. Gould, D. P., Bennett, Y. Tsapras, J. C. Yee, M. D. Albrow, I. A. Bond, P. Fouque, P., Browne, C. Han, C. Snodgrass, F. Finet, K. Furusawa, K. Harpsoe, W. Allen, M., Hundertmark, M. Freeman, D. Suzuki, and F. Abe

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a sub-Saturn mass exoplanet via gravitational microlensing, with detailed analysis of its properties and host star, highlighting the effectiveness of high-cadence surveys and multi-telescope observations.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed characterization of a sub-Saturn mass planet using microlensing with extensive multi-telescope data and Bayesian analysis.
Findings
Planet mass approximately 50 Earth masses
Host star mass around 0.38 solar masses
Planet located about 2.4 AU from its host
Abstract
We report the gravitational microlensing discovery of a sub-Saturn mass planet, MOA-2009-BLG-319Lb, orbiting a K or M-dwarf star in the inner Galactic disk or Galactic bulge. The high cadence observations of the MOA-II survey discovered this microlensing event and enabled its identification as a high magnification event approximately 24 hours prior to peak magnification. As a result, the planetary signal at the peak of this light curve was observed by 20 different telescopes, which is the largest number of telescopes to contribute to a planetary discovery to date. The microlensing model for this event indicates a planet-star mass ratio of q = (3.95 +/- 0.02) x 10^{-4} and a separation of d = 0.97537 +/- 0.00007 in units of the Einstein radius. A Bayesian analysis based on the measured Einstein radius crossing time, t_E, and angular Einstein radius, \theta_E, along with a standard…
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