Revisiting MOA 2013 BLG-220L: A Solar-type star with a Cold super-Jupiter Companion
Aikaterini Vandorou, David P. Bennett, Jean-Philippe Beaulieu,, Christophe L. Alard, Joshua W. Blackman, Andrew A. Cole, Aparna Bhattacharya,, Ian A. Bond, Naoki Koshimoto, Jean-Baptiste Marquette

TL;DR
This paper uses high-resolution imaging to directly measure the properties of a star-planet system discovered by microlensing, revealing a super-Jupiter orbiting a solar-type star and emphasizing the importance of follow-up observations.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurement of the lens star and planet masses in the MOA-2013-BLG-220 system, validating the use of high-resolution follow-up imaging in microlensing studies.
Findings
Lens star is a solar-type star with 0.88 solar masses.
Planet has a mass of approximately 2.74 Jupiter masses.
The system's properties challenge Bayesian predictions about planet occurrence.
Abstract
We present the analysis of high-resolution images of MOA-2013-BLG-220, taken with the Keck adaptive optics system 6 years after the initial observation, identifying the lens as a solar-type star hosting a super-Jupiter mass planet. The masses of planets and host-stars discovered by microlensing are often not determined from light curve data, while the star-planet mass-ratio and projected separation in units of Einstein ring radius are well measured. High-resolution follow-up observations after the lensing event is complete can resolve the source and lens. This allows direct measurements of flux, and the amplitude and direction of proper motion, giving strong constraints on the system parameters. Due to the high relative proper motion, mas/yr, the source and lens were resolved in 2019, with a separation of mas. Thus, we constrain the lens…
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