Gravitational Microlensing Evidence for a Planet Orbiting a Binary Star System
/ Authors
D. Bennett, S. Rhie, A. Becker, N. Butler, J. Dann, S. Kaspi, E. Leibowitz, Y. Lipkin, D. Maoz, H. Mendelson
and 5 more authors
/ Abstract
The study of extra-solar planetary systems has emerged as a new discipline of observational astronomy in the past few years with the discovery of a number of extra-solar planets. 1 , 2 The properties of most of these extra-solar planets were not anticipated by theoretical work on the formation of planetary systems, although the radial velocity technique used for these discoveries is not yet sensitive to planetary systems like our own. 3 Here we report observations and light curve modeling of gravitational microlensing event MACHO-97-BLG-41, which indicates that the lens system consists of a planet orbiting a binary star system. According to this model, the mass ratio of the binary star system is 3.8:1 and the stars are most likely to be a late K dwarf and an M dwarf with a separation of about 1.8 AU. A planet of about 3 Jupiter masses orbits this system at a distance of
DOI: 10.1038/46990