A Likely Detection of a Two-Planet System in a Low Magnification Microlensing Event
D. Suzuki, D. P. Bennett, A. Udalski, I. A. Bond, T. Sumi, C. Han, F., Abe, Y. Asakura, R.K. Barry, A. Bhattacharya, M. Donachie, M. Freeman, A., Fukui, Y. Hirao, Y. Itow, N. Koshimoto, M.C.A. Li, C. H. Ling, K. Masuda, Y., Matsubara, Y. Muraki, M. Nagakane, K. Onishi

TL;DR
This paper reports the likely detection of a two-planet system via microlensing, marking the first such detection in low magnification events, and estimates that about 6% of stars host two cold giant planets.
Contribution
It presents the first two-planet microlensing detection in low magnification events and estimates the occurrence rate of such systems.
Findings
Two planetary companions with specific mass ratios identified.
The system's physical parameters are estimated via Bayesian analysis.
This is the third multi-planet system detected by microlensing.
Abstract
We report on the analysis of a microlensing event OGLE-2014-BLG-1722 that showed two distinct short term anomalies. The best fit model to the observed light curves shows that the two anomalies are explained with two planetary mass ratio companions to the primary lens. Although a binary source model is also able to explain the second anomaly, it is marginally ruled out by 3.1 . The 2-planet model indicates that the first anomaly was caused by planet "b" with a mass ratio of and projected separation in unit of the Einstein radius, . The second anomaly reveals planet "c" with a mass ratio of with compared to the single planet model. Its separation has a so-called close-wide degeneracy. We estimated the physical parameters of the lens system from…
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