Gaia22dkvLb: A Microlensing Planet Potentially Accessible to Radial-velocity Characterization

Wu, Zexuan; Dong, Subo; Yi, Tuan; Liu, Zhuokai; El-Badry, Kareem; Gould, Andrew; Wyrzykowski, L.; Rybicki, K. A.; Bachelet, Etienne; Christie, Grant W.; de Almeida, L.; Monard, L. A. G.; McCormick, J.; Natusch, Tim; Zieliński, P.; Chen, Huiling; Huang, Yang; Liu, Chang; Mérand, A.; Mróz, Przemek; Shangguan, Jinyi; Udalski, Andrzej; Woillez, J.; Zhang, Huawei; Hambsch, Franz-Josef; Mikołajczyk, P. J.; Gromadzki, M.; Ratajczak, M.; Kruszyńska, Katarzyna; Ihanec, N.; Pylypenko, Uliana; Sitek, M.; Howil, K.; Zola, Staszek; Michniewicz, Olga; Zejmo, Michal; Lewis, Fraser; Bronikowski, Mateusz; Potter, Stephen; Andrzejewski, Jan; Merc, Jaroslav; Street, Rachel; Fukui, Akihiko; Figuera Jaimes, R.; Bozza, V.; Rota, P.; Cassan, A.; Dominik, M.; Tsapras, Y.; Hundertmark, M.; Wambsganss, J.; Bąkowska, K.; Słowikowska, A.
Referencia bibliográfica

The Astronomical Journal

Fecha de publicación:
8
2024
Número de autores
53
Número de autores del IAC
1
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
We report discovering an exoplanet from following up a microlensing event alerted by Gaia. The event Gaia22dkv is toward a disk source rather than the traditional bulge microlensing fields. Our primary analysis yields a Jovian planet with at a projected orbital separation au, and the host is a ∼1.1 M ⊙ turnoff star at ∼1.3 kpc. At , the host is far brighter than any previously discovered microlensing planet host, opening up the opportunity to test the microlensing model with radial velocity (RV) observations. RV data can be used to measure the planet's orbital period and eccentricity, and they also enable searching for inner planets of the microlensing cold Jupiter, as expected from the "inner–outer correlation" inferred from Kepler and RV discoveries. Furthermore, we show that Gaia astrometric microlensing will not only allow precise measurements of its angular Einstein radius θ E but also directly measure the microlens parallax vector and unambiguously break a geometric light-curve degeneracy, leading to the definitive characterization of the lens system.