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Featured researches published by To. Saito.


Nature | 2011

Unbound or distant planetary mass population detected by gravitational microlensing

T. Sumi; K. Kamiya; D. P. Bennett; I. A. Bond; F. Abe; C. S. Botzler; A. Fukui; K. Furusawa; J. B. Hearnshaw; Y. Itow; P. M. Kilmartin; A. Korpela; W. Lin; C. H. Ling; K. Masuda; Y. Matsubara; N. Miyake; M. Motomura; Y. Muraki; M. Nagaya; S. Nakamura; K. Ohnishi; T. Okumura; Y. C. Perrott; N. J. Rattenbury; To. Saito; T. Sako; D. J. Sullivan; W. L. Sweatman; P. J. Tristram

Since 1995, more than 500 exoplanets have been detected using different techniques, of which 12 were detected with gravitational microlensing. Most of these are gravitationally bound to their host stars. There is some evidence of free-floating planetary-mass objects in young star-forming regions, but these objects are limited to massive objects of 3 to 15 Jupiter masses with large uncertainties in photometric mass estimates and their abundance. Here, we report the discovery of a population of unbound or distant Jupiter-mass objects, which are almost twice () as common as main-sequence stars, based on two years of gravitational microlensing survey observations towards the Galactic Bulge. These planetary-mass objects have no host stars that can be detected within about ten astronomical units by gravitational microlensing. However, a comparison with constraints from direct imaging suggests that most of these planetary-mass objects are not bound to any host star. An abrupt change in the mass function at about one Jupiter mass favours the idea that their formation process is different from that of stars and brown dwarfs. They may have formed in proto-planetary disks and subsequently scattered into unbound or very distant orbits.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

A Low-Mass Planet with a Possible Sub-Stellar-Mass Host in Microlensing Event MOA-2007-BLG-192

D. P. Bennett; I. A. Bond; A. Udalski; T. Sumi; F. Abe; A. Fukui; K. Furusawa; J. B. Hearnshaw; S. Holderness; Y. Itow; K. Kamiya; A. Korpela; P. M. Kilmartin; W. Lin; C. H. Ling; K. Masuda; Y. Matsubara; N. Miyake; Y. Muraki; M. Nagaya; Teppei Okumura; K. Ohnishi; Y. C. Perrott; N. J. Rattenbury; T. Sako; To. Saito; Shuji Sato; L. Skuljan; D. J. Sullivan; W. L. Sweatman

We report the detection of an extrasolar planet of mass ratio q~2×10-4 in microlensing event MOA-2007-BLG-192. The best-fit microlensing model shows both the microlensing parallax and finite source effects, and these can be combined to obtain the lens masses of M=0.060+0.028-0.021 Msolar for the primary and m=3.3+4.9-1.6 M? for the planet. However, the observational coverage of the planetary deviation is sparse and incomplete, and the radius of the source was estimated without the benefit of a source star color measurement. As a result, the 2 ? limits on the mass ratio and finite source measurements are weak. Nevertheless, the microlensing parallax signal clearly favors a substellar mass planetary host, and the measurement of finite source effects in the light curve supports this conclusion. Adaptive optics images taken with the Very Large Telescope (VLT) NACO instrument are consistent with a lens star that is either a brown dwarf or a star at the bottom of the main sequence. Follow-up VLT and/or Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations will either confirm that the primary is a brown dwarf or detect the low-mass lens star and enable a precise determination of its mass. In either case, the lens star, MOA-2007-BLG-192L, is the lowest mass primary known to have a companion with a planetary mass ratio, and the planet, MOA-2007-BLG-192Lb, is probably the lowest mass exoplanet found to date, aside from the lowest mass pulsar planet.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

The Extreme Microlensing Event OGLE-2007-BLG-224: Terrestrial Parallax Observation of a Thick-Disk Brown Dwarf

A. Gould; A. Udalski; Berto Monard; K. Horne; Subo Dong; N. Miyake; Kailash C. Sahu; D. P. Bennett; Ł. Wyrzykowski; I. Soszyński; M. K. Szymański; M. Kubiak; G. Pietrzyński; O. Szewczyk; K. Ulaczyk; W. Allen; G. W. Christie; D. L. DePoy; B. S. Gaudi; Cheongho Han; C.-U. Lee; J. McCormick; T. Natusch; B.-G. Park; Richard W. Pogge; A. Allan; M. F. Bode; D. M. Bramich; M. J. Burgdorf; M. Dominik

Parallax is the most fundamental technique for measuring distances to astronomical objects. Although terrestrial parallax was pioneered over 2000 years ago by Hipparchus (ca. 140 B.C.E.) to measure the distance to the Moon, the baseline of the Earth is so small that terrestrial parallax can generally only be applied to objects in the Solar System. However, there exists a class of extreme gravitational microlensing events in which the effects of terrestrial parallax can be readily detected and so permit the measurement of the distance, mass, and transverse velocity of the lens. Here we report observations of the first such extreme microlensing event OGLE-2007-BLG-224, from which we infer that the lens is a brown dwarf of mass M = 0.056 ± 0.004 M ☉, with a distance of 525 ± 40 pc and a transverse velocity of 113 ± 21 km s–1. The velocity places the lens in the thick disk, making this the lowest-mass thick-disk brown dwarf detected so far. Follow-up observations may allow one to observe the light from the brown dwarf itself, thus serving as an important constraint for evolutionary models of these objects and potentially opening a new window on substellar objects. The low a priori probability of detecting a thick-disk brown dwarf in this event, when combined with additional evidence from other observations, suggests that old substellar objects may be more common than previously assumed.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

DETERMINING THE PHYSICAL LENS PARAMETERS OF THE BINARY GRAVITATIONAL MICROLENSING EVENT MOA-2009-BLG-016

K.-H. Hwang; Cheongho Han; I. A. Bond; N. Miyake; F. Abe; D. P. Bennett; C. S. Botzler; A. Fukui; K. Furusawa; F. Hayashi; J. B. Hearnshaw; S. Hosaka; Y. Itow; K. Kamiya; P. M. Kilmartin; A. Korpela; W. Lin; C. H. Ling; S. Makita; K. Masuda; Y. Matsubara; Y. Muraki; K. Nishimoto; K. Ohnishi; Y. C. Perrott; N. J. Rattenbury; To. Saito; T. Sako; L. Skuljan; D. J. Sullivan

We report the result of the analysis of the light curve of the microlensing event MOA-2009-BLG-016. The light curve is characterized by a short-duration anomaly near the peak and an overall asymmetry. We find that the peak anomaly is due to a binary companion to the primary lens and the asymmetry of the light curve is explained by the parallax effect caused by the acceleration of the observer over the course of the event due to the orbital motion of the Earth around the Sun. In addition, we detect evidence for the effect of the finite size of the source near the peak of the event, which allows us to measure the angular Einstein radius of the lens system. The Einstein radius combined with the microlens parallax allows us to determine the total mass of the lens and the distance to the lens. We identify three distinct classes of degenerate solutions for the binary lens parameters, where two are manifestations of the previously identified degeneracies of close/wide binaries and positive/negative impact parameters, while the third class is caused by the symmetric cycloid shape of the caustic. We find that, for the best-fit solution, the estimated mass of the lower-mass component of the binary is (0.04 ± 0.01) M ☉, implying a brown-dwarf companion. However, there exists a solution that is worse only by Δχ2 ~ 3 for which the mass of the secondary is above the hydrogen-burning limit. Unfortunately, resolving these two degenerate solutions will be difficult as the relative lens-source proper motions for both are similar and small (~1 mas yr-1) and thus the lens will remain blended with the source for the next several decades.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

OGLE-2005-BLG-071Lb, THE MOST MASSIVE M DWARF PLANETARY COMPANION?

Subo Dong; Andrew Gould; A. Udalski; Jay Anderson; G. W. Christie; B. S. Gaudi; M. Jaroszyński; M. Kubiak; M. K. Szymański; G. Pietrzyński; I. Soszyński; O. Szewczyk; K. Ulaczyk; Ł. Wyrzykowski; D. L. DePoy; Derek B. Fox; Avishay Gal-Yam; Cheongho Han; Sebastien Lepine; J. McCormick; Eran O. Ofek; B.-G. Park; Richard W. Pogge; F. Abe; D. P. Bennett; I. A. Bond; T. R. Britton; A. C. Gilmore; J. B. Hearnshaw; Y. Itow


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

SUB-SATURN PLANET MOA-2008-BLG-310Lb: LIKELY TO BE IN THE GALACTIC BULGE*

Julia Janczak; A. Fukui; Subo Dong; L. A. G. Monard; S. Kozłowski; A. Gould; J. P. Beaulieu; D. Kubas; J. B. Marquette; T. Sumi; I. A. Bond; D. P. Bennett; F. Abe; K. Furusawa; J. B. Hearnshaw; S. Hosaka; Y. Itow; K. Kamiya; A. Korpela; P. M. Kilmartin; W. Lin; C. H. Ling; S. Makita; K. Masuda; Y. Matsubara; N. Miyake; Y. Muraki; M. Nagaya; Takahiro Nagayama; K. Nishimoto

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D. P. Bennett

Goddard Space Flight Center

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A. Korpela

Victoria University of Wellington

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