KMT-2018-BLG-1988Lb: microlensing super-Earth orbiting a low-mass disk dwarf
Cheongho Han, Andrew Gould, Michael D. Albrow, Sun-Ju Chung, Kyu-Ha, Hwang, Youn Kil Jung, Doeon Kim, Chung-Uk Lee, Shude Mao, Yoon-Hyun Ryu,, In-Gu Shin, Yossi Shvartzvald, Jennifer C. Yee, Weicheng Zang, Sang-Mok Cha,, Dong-Jin Kim, Hyoun-Woo Kim, Seung-Lee Kim, Dong-Joo Lee

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a super-Earth exoplanet via microlensing, highlighting the effectiveness of the KMTNet survey in detecting low-mass planets around low-mass stars.
Contribution
The study reanalyzes existing microlensing data to identify a new super-Earth planet, demonstrating the survey's capability to find very low-mass exoplanets.
Findings
Discovered a super-Earth with ~6.8 Earth masses.
Planet located near the Einstein ring of a low-mass host star.
KMTNet survey is a key resource for low-mass planet detection.
Abstract
We reexamine high-magnification microlensing events in the previous data collected by the KMTNet survey with the aim of finding planetary signals that were not noticed before. In this work, we report the planetary system KMT-2018-BLG-1988L that was found from this investigation. The planetary signal appears as a deviation with ~mag from a single-lens light curve and lasted for about 6 hours. The deviation exhibits a pattern of a dip surrounded by weak bumps on both sides of the dip. The analysis of the lensing light curve indicates that the signal is produced by a low mass-ratio () planetary companion located near the Einstein ring of the host star. The mass of the planet, and for the two possible solutions, estimated from the Bayesian analysis indicates that the planet is in…
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