KMT-2021-BLG-1547Lb: Giant microlensing planet detected through a signal deformed by source binarity
Cheongho Han, Weicheng Zang, Youn Kil Jung, Ian A. Bond, Sun-Ju Chung,, Michael D. Albrow, Andrew Gould, Kyu-Ha Hwang, Yoon-Hyun Ryu, In-Gu Shin,, Yossi Shvartzvald, Hongjing Yang, Jennifer C. Yee, Sang-Mok Cha, Doeon Kim,, Dong-Jin Kim, Seung-Lee Kim, Chung-Uk Lee, Dong-Joo Lee

TL;DR
This paper analyzes microlensing data to identify a planetary system with a giant planet, revealing the importance of complex models like source binarity for interpreting anomalies in microlensing events.
Contribution
It demonstrates that source binarity can explain residuals in microlensing light curves, leading to more accurate detection and characterization of exoplanets.
Findings
The event's lens hosts a planet with ~1.5 Jupiter masses.
The source is a binary star system with specific spectral types.
The lens system is located about 5 kpc from Earth.
Abstract
We investigate the previous microlensing data collected by the KMTNet survey in search of anomalous events for which no precise interpretations of the anomalies have been suggested. From this investigation, we find that the anomaly in the lensing light curve of the event KMT-2021-BLG-1547 is approximately described by a binary-lens (2L1S) model with a lens possessing a giant planet, but the model leaves unexplained residuals. We investigate the origin of the residuals by testing more sophisticated models that include either an extra lens component (3L1S model) or an extra source star (2L2S model) to the 2L1S configuration of the lens system. From these analyses, we find that the residuals from the 2L1S model originate from the existence of a faint companion to the source. The 2L2S solution substantially reduces the residuals and improves the model fit by with respect…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
