MOA-2007-BLG-197: Exploring the brown dwarf desert
C. Ranc (1, 35), A. Cassan (1, 35), M. D. Albrow (2, 35), D., Kubas (1, 35), I. A. Bond (3, 36), V. Batista (1, 35), J.-P., Beaulieu (1, 35), D. P. Bennett (4, 36), M. Dominik (5, 35), Subo, Dong (6, 37), P. Fouqu\'e (7, 8, 35), A. Gould (9, 37), J., Greenhill (10, 35)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of a brown dwarf companion to a Sun-like star via gravitational microlensing, providing insights into brown dwarf demographics and formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It presents the discovery and detailed characterization of a brown dwarf companion through microlensing, combining observational data and statistical analysis of brown dwarf populations.
Findings
Brown dwarf companion mass: 41+/-2 Mjup
Host star mass: 0.82+/-0.04 Msun
Structured brown dwarf population with depletion and accumulation regions
Abstract
We present the analysis of MOA-2007-BLG-197Lb, the first brown dwarf companion to a Sun-like star detected through gravitational microlensing. The event was alerted and followed-up photometrically by a network of telescopes from the PLANET, MOA, and uFUN collaborations, and observed at high angular resolution using the NaCo instrument at the VLT. From the modelling of the microlensing light curve, we derived the binary lens separation in Einstein radius units (s~1.13) and a mass ratio of (4.732+/-0.020)x10^{-2}. Annual parallax, lens orbital motion and finite source effects were included in the models. To recover the lens system's physical parameters, we combined the resulting light curve best-fit parameters with (J,H,Ks) magnitudes obtained with VLT NaCo and calibrated using IRSF and 2MASS data. We derived a lens total mass of 0.86+/-0.04 Msun and a lens distance of 4.2+/-0.3 kpc. We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
