OGLE-2017-BLG-0173Lb: Low Mass-Ratio Planet in a "Hollywood" Microlensing Event
K.-H. Hwang, A. Udalski, Y. Shvartzvald, Y.-H. Ryu, M. D. Albrow,, S.-J. Chung, A. Gould, C. Han, Y. K. Jung, I.-G. Shin, J. C. Yee, W. Zhu,, S.-M. Cha, D.-J. Kim, H.-W. Kim, S.-L. Kim, C.-U. Lee, D.-J. Lee, Y. Lee,, B.-G. Park, R. W. Pogge, J. Skowron, P. Mroz, R. Poleski

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of an extremely low mass-ratio exoplanet via a unique microlensing event, revealing a new degeneracy in the interpretation of such events and providing estimates of the planet's and host's properties.
Contribution
The study introduces a formalism to analyze Hollywood microlensing events and uncovers a previously unrecognized degeneracy affecting planet mass ratio estimates.
Findings
Detected a planet with one of the lowest mass ratios ever
Identified a new degeneracy ('Cannae' vs 'von Schlieffen') in microlensing data
Estimated host and planet masses with Bayesian analysis
Abstract
We present microlensing planet OGLE-2017-BLG-0173Lb, with planet-host mass ratio either or , the lowest or among the lowest ever detected. The planetary perturbation is strongly detected, , because it arises from a bright (therefore, large) source passing over and enveloping the planetary caustic: a so-called "Hollywood" event. The factor offset in arises because of a previously unrecognized discrete degeneracy between Hollywood events in which the caustic is fully enveloped and those in which only one flank is enveloped, which we dub "Cannae" and "von Schlieffen", respectively. This degeneracy is "accidental" in that it arises from gaps in the data. Nevertheless, the fact that it appears in a planetary anomaly is striking. We present a simple formalism to estimate the…
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