OGLE-2017-BLG-1038: A Possible Brown-dwarf Binary Revealed by Spitzer Microlensing Parallax
/ Authors
A. Malpas, M. Albrow, J. Yee, A. Gould, A. Udalski, Antonio Herrera Martin, C. Beichman, G. Bryden, S. C. Novati, S. Carey
and 30 more authors
C. Henderson, B. Gaudi, Y. Shvartzvald, Wei Zhu, S. Cha, S. Chung, C. Han, K. Hwang, Y. Jung, Dong-Jin Kim, Hyoun-Woo Kim, Seung-Lee Kim, Chung-Uk Lee, Dong-Joo Lee, Yongseok Lee, B.-G. Park, R. Pogge, Y. Ryu, I. Shin, W. Zang, P. Iwanek, S. Kozłowski, P. Mróz, P. Pietrukowicz, R. Poleski, K. Rybicki, J. Skowron, I. Soszyński, M. Szymański, K. Ulaczyk
/ Abstract
We report the analysis of microlensing event OGLE-2017-BLG-1038, observed by the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment, Korean Microlensing Telescope Network, and Spitzer telescopes. The event is caused by a giant source star in the Galactic Bulge passing over a large resonant binary-lens caustic. The availability of space-based data allows the full set of physical parameters to be calculated. However, there exists an eightfold degeneracy in the parallax measurement. The four best solutions correspond to very-low-mass binaries near ( M1=170−50+40MJ and M2=110−30+20MJ ), or well below ( M1=22.5−0.4+0.7MJ and M2=13.3−0.3+0.4MJ ) the boundary between stars and brown dwarfs. A conventional analysis, with scaled uncertainties for Spitzer data, implies a very-low-mass brown-dwarf binary lens at a distance of 2 kpc. Compensating for systematic Spitzer errors using a Gaussian process model suggests that a higher mass M-dwarf binary at 6 kpc is equally likely. A Bayesian comparison based on a galactic model favors the larger-mass solutions. We demonstrate how this degeneracy can be resolved within the next 10 years through infrared adaptive-optics imaging with a 40 m class telescope.
Journal: The Astronomical Journal