Free-Floating planet Mass Function from MOA-II 9-year survey towards the Galactic Bulge
Takahiro Sumi, Naoki koshimoto, David P. Bennett, Nicholas J., Rattenbury, Fumio Abe, Richard Barry, Aparna Bhattacharya, Ian A. Bond,, Hirosane Fujii, Akihiko Fukui, Ryusei Hamada, Yuki Hirao, Stela Ishitani, Silva, Yoshitaka Itow, Rintaro Kirikawa, Iona Kondo, Yutaka Matsubara

TL;DR
This study measures the mass function of free-floating planets down to Earth mass using MOA-II microlensing data, revealing a power-law distribution and estimating their abundance and total mass per star.
Contribution
It provides the first measurement of the free-floating planet mass function down to Earth mass, including detection efficiency modeling and implications for planetary ejection.
Findings
Detected six short microlensing events likely caused by free-floating planets.
Modeled the mass function as a power-law with index ~0.96 for planets less than 0.02 solar masses.
Estimated about 21 free-floating planets per star with a total mass of 80 Earth masses.
Abstract
We present the first measurement of the mass function of free-floating planets (FFP) or very wide orbit planets down to an Earth mass, from the MOA-II microlensing survey in 2006-2014. Six events are likely to be due to planets with Einstein radius crossing times, days, and the shortest has days and an angular Einstein radius of as. We measure the detection efficiency depending on both and with image level simulations for the first time. These short events are well modeled by a power-law mass function, dexstar with for . This implies a total of FFP or very wide orbit planets of mass per star, with a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
