No Large Dependence of Planet Frequency on Galactocentric Distance
Naoki Koshimoto, David P. Bennett, Daisuke Suzuki, Ian A. Bond

TL;DR
This study uses gravitational microlensing data to analyze the distribution of planetary systems across the Galaxy, finding little dependence of planet frequency on Galactocentric distance, implying planets are common even in the Galactic bulge.
Contribution
It introduces a statistical method to infer the Galactic distribution of planets from microlensing proper motions, incorporating a model for planet-hosting probability based on host mass and distance.
Findings
Planet frequency shows minimal dependence on Galactocentric distance.
Galactic bulge hosts planets, indicating widespread planetary presence.
Method combines microlensing data with Galactic modeling for distribution analysis.
Abstract
Gravitational microlensing is currently the only technique that helps study the Galactic distribution of planets as a function of distance from the Galactic center. The Galactic location of a lens system can be uniquely determined only when at least two of the three quantities that determine the mass--distance relations are measured. However, even if only one mass--distance relation can be obtained, a large sample of microlensing events can be used to statistically discuss the Galactic distribution of the lenses. In this study, we extract the Galactic distribution of planetary systems from the distribution of the lens-source proper motion, , for a given Einstein radius crossing time, , measured for the 28 planetary events in the statistical sample by Suzuki et al. (2016). Because microlensing is randomly caused by stars in our Galaxy, the observational…
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