Three faint-source microlensing planets detected via resonant-caustic channel
Cheongho Han, Andrzej Udalski, Doeon Kim, Yoon-Hyun Ryu, Valerio, Bozza, Michael D. Albrow, Sun-Ju Chung, Andrew Gould, Kyu-Ha Hwang, Youn Kil, Jung, Chung-Uk Lee, In-Gu Shin, Yossi Shvartzvald, Jennifer C. Yee, Weicheng, Zang, Sang-Mok Cha, Dong-Jin Kim, Hyoun-Woo Kim

TL;DR
This study reanalyzed microlensing data from 2017-2019, discovering three faint-source planets via resonant caustic crossings, revealing that massive gas giants are common around low-mass stars.
Contribution
It presents the discovery of three new microlensing planets detected through a novel reinvestigation of existing data focusing on faint sources and resonant caustic crossings.
Findings
Three new planets discovered with unique lensing solutions.
Host stars are less massive than the Sun, planets are heavier than Jupiter.
Planets are located beyond the snow lines of their host stars.
Abstract
We conducted a project of reinvestigating the 2017--2019 microlensing data collected by the high-cadence surveys with the aim of finding planets that were missed due to the deviations of planetary signals from the typical form of short-term anomalies. The project led us to find three planets including KMT-2017-BLG-2509Lb, OGLE-2017-BLG-1099Lb, and OGLE-2019-BLG-0299Lb. The lensing light curves of the events have a common characteristic that the planetary signals were produced by the crossings of faint source stars over the resonant caustics formed by giant planets located near the Einstein rings of host stars. For all planetary events, the lensing solutions are uniquely determined without any degeneracy. It is estimated that the host masses are in the range of , which corresponds to early M to late K dwarfs, and thus the host stars are less massive…
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