A Terrestrial-mass Rogue Planet Candidate Detected in the Shortest-timescale Microlensing Event

Author:

Mróz PrzemekORCID,Poleski RadosławORCID,Gould Andrew,Udalski AndrzejORCID,Sumi Takahiro,Szymański Michał K.ORCID,Soszyński IgorORCID,Pietrukowicz PawełORCID,Kozłowski SzymonORCID,Skowron JanORCID,Ulaczyk KrzysztofORCID,Albrow Michael D.ORCID,Chung Sun-JuORCID,Han CheonghoORCID,Hwang Kyu-HaORCID,Jung Youn Kil,Kim Hyoun-Woo,Ryu Yoon-HyunORCID,Shin In-GuORCID,Shvartzvald YossiORCID,Yee Jennifer C.ORCID,Zang WeichengORCID,Cha Sang-Mok,Kim Dong-Jin,Kim Seung-Lee,Lee Chung-Uk,Lee Dong-Joo,Lee Yongseok,Park Byeong-Gon,Pogge Richard W.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Some low-mass planets are expected to be ejected from their parent planetary systems during early stages of planetary system formation. According to planet formation theories, such as the core accretion theory, typical masses of ejected planets should be between 0.3 and 1.0 M . Although in practice such objects do not emit any light, they may be detected using gravitational microlensing via their light-bending gravity. Microlensing events due to terrestrial-mass rogue planets are expected to have extremely small angular Einstein radii (≲1 μas) and extremely short timescales (≲0.1 day). Here, we present the discovery of the shortest-timescale microlensing event, OGLE-2016-BLG-1928, identified to date ( ). Thanks to the detection of finite-source effects in the light curve of the event, we were able to measure the angular Einstein radius of the lens μas, making the event the most extreme short-timescale microlens discovered to date. Depending on its unknown distance, the lens may be a Mars- to Earth-mass object, with the former possibility favored by the Gaia proper motion measurement of the source. The planet may be orbiting a star but we rule out the presence of stellar companions up to the projected distance of ∼8.0 au from the planet. Our discovery demonstrates that terrestrial-mass free-floating planets can be detected and characterized using microlensing.

Funder

National Science Centre, Poland

Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange

NASA ∣ Jet Propulsion Laboratory

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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