MOA-2010-BLG-073L: An M-Dwarf with a Substellar Companion at the Planet/Brown Dwarf Boundary
R. A. Street, J.-Y. Choi, Y. Tsapras, C. Han, K. Furusawa, M., Hundertmark, A. Gould, T. Sumi, I. A. Bond, D. Wouters, R. Zellem, A. Udalski, (The RoboNet Collaboration), C. Snodgrass, K. Horne, M. Dominik, P. Browne,, N. Kains, D. M. Bramich, D. Bajek, I. A. Steele

TL;DR
This study analyzes a microlensing event revealing an M-dwarf star with a substellar companion near the planet/brown dwarf boundary, utilizing parallax and orbital motion to determine system parameters.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of a lens system with an M-dwarf and a companion at the planet/brown dwarf boundary using microlensing data.
Findings
The primary lens is an M-dwarf of 0.16 solar masses.
The companion has a mass of 11 Jupiter masses, near the planet/brown dwarf boundary.
The lens system is located approximately 2.8 kpc away.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the anomalous microlensing event, MOA-2010-BLG-073, announced by the Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics survey on 2010-03-18. This event was remarkable because the source was previously known to be photometrically variable. Analyzing the pre-event source lightcurve, we demonstrate that it is an irregular variable over time scales >200d. Its dereddened color, , is 1.2210.051mag and from our lens model we derive a source radius of 14.71.3 , suggesting that it is a red giant star. We initially explored a number of purely microlensing models for the event but found a residual gradient in the data taken prior to and after the event. This is likely to be due to the variability of the source rather than part of the lensing event, so we incorporated a slope parameter in our model in order to derive the true parameters of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
