TY - JOUR A1 - Kubas, Daniel A1 - Cassan, A. A1 - Beaulieu, Jean-Philippe A1 - Coutures, C. A1 - Dominik, M. A1 - Albrow, Michael D. A1 - Brillant, Stephane A1 - Caldwell, John A. R. A1 - Dominis, Dijana A1 - Donatowicz, J. A1 - Fendt, Christian A1 - Fouque, P. A1 - Jorgensen, Uffe Grae A1 - Greenhill, John A1 - Hill, K. A1 - Heinmüller, Janine A1 - Horne, Keith A1 - Kane, Stephen R. A1 - Marquette, Jean-Baptiste A1 - Martin, Ralph A1 - Menzies, J. W. A1 - Pollard, K. R. A1 - Sahu, K. C. A1 - Vinter, C. A1 - Wambsganss, Joachim A1 - Watson, R. A1 - Williams, A. A1 - Thurl, C. T1 - Full characterization of binary-lens event OGLE-2002-BLG-069 from PLANET observations N2 - We analyze the photometric data obtained by PLANET and OGLE on the caustic-crossing binary-lens microlensing event OGLE-2002-BLG-069. Thanks to the excellent photometric and spectroscopic coverage of the event, we are able to constrain the lens model up to the known ambiguity between close and wide binary lenses. The detection of annual parallax in combination with measurements of extended-source effects allows us to determine the mass, distance and velocity of the lens components for the competing models. While the model involving a close binary lens leads to a Bulge- Disc lens scenario with a lens mass of M = (0.51 ± 0.15) M-⊙ and distance of D-L = (2.9 ± 0.4) kpc, the wide binary lens solution requires a rather implausible binary black-hole lens ( M ≳ 126 M-⊙). Furthermore we compare current state-of-the-art numerical and empirical models for the surface brightness profile of the source, a G5III Bulge giant. We find that a linear limb-darkening model for the atmosphere of the source star is consistent with the data whereas a PHOENIX atmosphere model assuming LTE and with no free parameter does not match our observations Y1 - 2005 SN - 0004-6361 ER -