KMT-2016-BLG-1337L: A Saturn-mass planet orbiting within a binary system of low-mass stars
Cheongho Han, Chung-Uk Lee, Ian A. Bond, Andrzej Udalski, Michael D. Albrow, Sun-Ju Chung, Andrew Gould, Youn Kil Jung, Kyu-Ha Hwang, Yoon-Hyun Ryu, Yossi Shvartzvald, In-Gu Shin, Jennifer C. Yee, Weicheng Zang, Hongjing Yang, Doeon Kim, Dong-Jin Kim, Sang-Mok Cha, Seung-Lee Kim

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a Saturn-mass planet orbiting within a binary system of low-mass stars through microlensing, highlighting the method's ability to detect planets in complex stellar environments.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed microlensing analysis of a planet in a binary low-mass star system, revealing two possible planetary configurations and demonstrating microlensing's sensitivity to such systems.
Findings
A planetary companion with ~0.3 or 7 Jupiter masses was detected.
The host binary consists of two early M-type dwarfs separated by ~3.5 au.
The system is located about 7 kpc away toward the Galactic bulge.
Abstract
We report the discovery and characterization of a planetary companion in the microlensing event KMT-2016-BLG-1337, which was produced by a binary system of low-mass stars. The light curve of the event exhibits a short-term anomaly superposed on the profile of a binary-lens single-source (2L1S) model. To investigate the nature of this anomaly, we performed detailed modeling under both the binary-lens binary-source (2L2S) and triple-lens single-source (3L1S) interpretations. The 3L1S model provides a substantially better fit to the data, strongly favoring the presence of a planetary companion in the lens system. Two viable solutions describe the event nearly equally well. In one solution, the planet has a mass of and lies at a projected separation of from the heavier member of the host binary. In the alternative solution,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
