Planetary and Other Short Binary Microlensing Events from the MOA Short Event Analysis
D. P. Bennett, T. Sumi, I. A. Bond, K. Kamiya, F. Abe, C. S. Botzler,, A. Fukui, K. Furusawa, Y. Itow, A. V. Korpela, P. M. Kilmartin, C. H. Ling,, K. Masuda, Y. Matsubara, N. Miyake, Y. Muraki, K. Ohnishi, N. J. Rattenbury,, To. Saito, D. J. Sullivan, D. Suzuki, W. L. Sweatman

TL;DR
This paper analyzes four short-duration binary microlensing events from MOA data, identifying a planetary event with a wide orbit, and discusses implications for the distribution of wide-separation planets.
Contribution
First detection of a planetary microlensing event where the host star is identified solely through binary effects, providing new insights into wide-orbit exoplanets.
Findings
One planetary event with a wide orbit at ~8.3 AU.
Mass ratio of the planet is approximately 4.9 x 10^{-3}.
Wide separation planets likely have median semi-major axes > 30 AU.
Abstract
We present the analysis of four candidate short duration binary microlensing events from the 2006-2007 MOA Project short event analysis. These events were discovered as a byproduct of an analysis designed to find short timescale single lens events that may be due to free-floating planets. Three of these events are determined to be microlensing events, while the fourth is most likely caused by stellar variability. For each of the three microlensing events, the signal is almost entirely due to a brief caustic feature with little or no lensing attributable mainly to the lens primary. One of these events, MOA-bin-1, is due to a planet, and it is the first example of a planetary event in which stellar host is only detected through binary microlensing effects. The mass ratio and separation are q = 4.9 +- 1.4 x 10^{-3} and s = 2.10 +- 0.05, respectively. A Bayesian analysis based on a standard…
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