OGLE-IV: Fourth Phase of the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment
A. Udalski, M.K. Szyma\'nski, G. Szyma\'nski

TL;DR
OGLE-IV is a large-scale sky variability survey targeting dense stellar regions, providing high-precision photometry, real-time alerts for microlensing and transients, and significantly advancing the discovery of variable stars and exoplanets.
Contribution
This paper details the technical setup, survey scope, and scientific achievements of OGLE-IV, including its real-time systems and impact on microlensing exoplanet discoveries.
Findings
Monitored over a billion sources across 3000+ square degrees.
Discovered hundreds of thousands of variable stars, with ongoing increases.
Contributed to the discovery of numerous microlensing exoplanets and free-floating planets.
Abstract
We present both the technical overview and main science drivers of the fourth phase of the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (hereafter OGLE-IV). OGLE-IV is currently one of the largest sky variability surveys worldwide, targeting the densest stellar regions of the sky. The survey covers over 3000 square degrees in the sky and monitors regularly over a billion sources. The main targets include the inner Galactic Bulge and the Magellanic System. Their photometry spans the range of mag and mag, respectively. Supplementary shallower Galaxy Variability Survey covers the extended Galactic bulge and 2/3 of the whole Galactic disk within the magnitude range of mag. All OGLE-IV surveys provide photometry with milli-magnitude accuracy at the bright end. The cadence of observations varies from 19-60 minutes in the inner Galactic bulge to 1-3 days in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
