4.6 Article

Terrestrial- and Neptune-mass Free-Floating Planet Candidates from the MOA-II 9 yr Galactic Bulge Survey

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 166, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ace689

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We report the discovery of low-mass free-floating planet (FFP) candidates from the analysis of MOA-II Galactic bulge survey data from 2006 to 2014. A statistical sample consisting of 3535 high-quality single-lens events with specific characteristics was identified, including a terrestrial-mass FFP candidate. The results suggest a large population of low-mass FFPs with a low detection efficiency for short-duration events.
We report the discoveries of low-mass free-floating planet (FFP) candidates from the analysis of 2006-2014 MOA-II Galactic bulge survey data. In this data set, we found 6111 microlensing candidates and identified a statistical sample consisting of 3535 high-quality single-lens events with Einstein radius crossing times in the range 0.057 < t(E)/days < 757, including 13 events that show clear finite-source effects with angular Einstein radii of 0.90 < theta(E)/mu as < 332.54. Two of the 12 events with t(E) < 1 day have significant finite-source effects, and one event, MOA-9y-5919, with tE = 0.057 +/- 0.016 days and t(E) = 0.90 +/- 0.14 mu as, is the second terrestrial-mass FFP candidate to date. A Bayesian analysis indicates a lens mass of 0.75(-0.46)(+1.23)M(circle plus) for this event. The low detection efficiency for short-duration events implies a large population of low-mass FFPs. The microlensing detection efficiency for low-mass planet events depends on both the Einstein radius crossing times and the angular Einstein radii, so we have used image-level simulations to determine the detection efficiency dependence on both t(E) and theta(E). This allows us to use a Galactic model to simulate the t(E) and theta(E) distribution of events produced by the known stellar populations and models of the FFP distribution that are fit to the data. Methods like this will be needed for the more precise FFP demographics determinations from Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope data.

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