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Published November 2018 | Published + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

KMT-2016-BLG-1820 and KMT-2016-BLG-2142: Two Microlensing Binaries Composed of Planetary-mass Companions and Very-low-mass Primaries

Abstract

We present the analyses of two short-timescale (t_E ~ 5 days) microlensing events, KMT-2016-BLG-1820 and KMT-2016-BLG-2142. In both light curves, the brief anomalies were clearly captured and densely covered by the Korea Microlensing Telescope Network survey. From these analyses, we find that both events have small Einstein radii of θ_E = 0.12 mas, suggesting that the binary-lens systems are composed of very-low-mass components and/or are located much closer to the lensed stars than to Earth. From Bayesian analyses, we find that these binaries have total system masses of 0.043^(+0.043)_(-0.018) M⊙ And 0.088^(+0.120)_(-0.041) M⊙, implying that they are well within the very-low-mass regime. The estimated lens-component masses indicate that the binary lenses consist of a giant-planet/brown-dwarf pair (KMT-2016-BLG-1820) and a dark/faint object pair (KMT-2016-BLG-2140) that are located near the deuterium-burning and hydrogen-burning mass limits, respectively. Both lens systems are likely to be in the Galactic disk with estimated distances of about 6 and 7 kpc. The projected lens-components separations are 1.1 and 0.8 au, and the mass ratios are 0.11 and 0.20. These prove that the microlensing method is effective to identify these closely separated very-low-mass binaries having low mass-ratios.

Additional Information

© 2018 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2018 May 24; revised 2018 August 30; accepted 2018 September 18; published 2018 October 18. This research has made use of the KMTNet system operated by the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI) and the data were obtained at three host sites of CTIO in Chile, SAAO in South Africa, and SSO in Australia. C.H. was supported by grant 2017R1A4A1015178 of the National Research Foundation of Korea. Work by W.Z. and A.G. were supported by AST-1516842 from the US NSF. W.Z. and A.G. were supported by JPL grant 1500811. A.G. is supported from KASI grant 2016-1-832-01.

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Published - Jung_2018_AJ_156_208.pdf

Accepted Version - 1805.09983.pdf

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Created:
August 19, 2023
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October 18, 2023