899 research outputs found

    Signatures of rotating binaries in micro-lensing experiments

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    Gravitational microlensing offers a powerful method with which to probe a variety of binary-lens systems, as the binarity of the lens introduces deviations from the typical (single-lens) Paczy\'nski behaviour in the event light curves. Generally, a static binary lens is considered to fit the observed light curve and, when the orbital motion is taken into account, an oversimplified model is usually employed. In this paper, we treat the binary-lens motion in a realistic way and focus on simulated events that are fitted well by a Paczy\'nski curve. We show that an accurate timing analysis of the residuals (calculated with respect to the best-fitting Paczy\'nski model) is usually sufficient to infer the orbital period of the binary lens. It goes without saying that the independently estimated period may be used to further constrain the orbital parameters obtained by the best-fitting procedure, which often gives degenerate solutions. We also present a preliminary analysis of the event OGLE-2011-BLG-1127 / MOA-2011-BLG-322, which has been recognized to be the result of a binary lens. The period analysis results in a periodicity of \simeq 12 days, which confirms the oscillation of the observed data around the best-fitting model. The estimated periodicity is probably associated with an intrinsic variability of the source star, and therefore there is an opportunity to use this technique to investigate either the intrinsic variability of the source or the effects induced by the binary-lens orbital motion.Comment: In press on MNRAS, 2014. 8 pages, 4 figures. On-line material available on the Journal web-pag

    Gamma ray astronomy and baryonic dark matter

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    Recently, Dixon et al. have re-analyzed the EGRET data, finding a statistically significant diffuse γ\gamma-ray emission from the galactic halo. We show that this emission can naturally be explained within a previously-proposed model for baryonic dark matter, in which γ\gamma-rays are produced through the interaction of high-energy cosmic-ray protons with cold H2H_2 clouds clumped into dark clusters - these dark clusters supposedly populate the outer galactic halo and can show up in microlensing observations. Our estimate for the halo γ\gamma-ray flux turns out to be in remarkably good agreement with the discovery by Dixon et al. We also address future prospects to test our predictions.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure included, to appear in ApJ 510, L103 (1999

    Investigating the free-floating planet mass by Euclid observations

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    The detection of anomalies in gravitational microlensing events is nowadays one of the main goals among the microlensing community. In the case of single-lens events, these anomalies can be caused by the finite source effects, that is when the source disk size is not negligible, and by the Earth rotation around the Sun (the so-called parallax effect). The finite source and parallax effects may help to define the mass of the lens, uniquely. Free-floating planets (FFPs) are extremely dim objects, and gravitational microlensing provides at present the exclusive method to investigate these bodies. In this work, making use of a synthetic population algorithm, we study the possibility of detecting the finite source and parallax effects in simulated microlensing events caused by FFPs towards the Galactic bulge, taking into consideration the capabilities of the space-based Euclid telescope. We find a significant efficiency for detecting the parallax effect in microlensing events with detectable finite source effect, that turns out to be about 51% for mass function index .Comment: Astrophysics and Space Science 201

    Estimating Finite Source Effects in Microlensing Events due to Free-Floating Planets with the Euclid Survey

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    In recent years free-loating planets (FFPs) have drawn a great interest among astrophysicists. Gravitational microlensing is a unique and exclusive method for their investigation which may allow obtaining precious information about their mass and spatial distribution. The planned Euclid space-based observatory will be able to detect a substantial number of microlensing events caused by FFPs towards the Galactic bulge. Making use of a synthetic population algorithm, we investigate the possibility of detecting finite source effects in simulated microlensing events due to FFPs. We find a significant efficiency for finite source effect detection that turns out to be between 20% and 40% for a FFP power law mass function index in the range [0.9, 1.6]. For many of such events it will also be possible to measure the angular Einstein radius and therefore constrain the lens physical parameters. These kinds of observations will also offer a unique possibility to investigate the photosphere and atmosphere of Galactic bulge stars.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, published in Advances in Astronomy, Volume 2015, Article ID 40230

    Starspot induced effects in microlensing events with rotating source star

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    We consider the effects induced by the presence of hot and cold spots on the source star in the light curves of simulated microlensing events due to either single or binary lenses taking into account the rotation of the source star and the orbital motion of the lens system. Our goal is to study the anomalies induced by these effects on simulated microlensing light curves.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Constraints on Cold H_2 Clouds from Gravitational Microlensing Searches

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    It has been proposed that the Galaxy might contain a population of cold clouds in numbers sufficient to account for a substantial fraction of the total mass of the Galaxy. These clouds would have masses of the order of 10^{-3} Solar mass and sizes of the order of 10 AU. We consider here the lensing effects of such clouds on the light from background stars. A semianalytical formalism for calculation of the magnification event rate produced by such gaseous lensing is developed, taking into account the spatial distribution of the dark matter in the Galaxy, the velocity distribution of the lensing clouds and source stars, and motion of the observer. Event rates are calculated for the case of gaseous lensing of stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud and results are directly compared with the results of the search for gravitational microlensing events undertaken by the MACHO collaboration. The MACHO experiment strongly constrains the properties of the proposed molecular clouds, but does not completely rule them out. Future monitoring programs will either detect or more strongly constrain this proposed population.Comment: 36 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, typos corrected, minor change

    A catalogue sample of low mass galaxies observed in X-rays with central candidate black holes

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    We present a sample of XX-ray selected candidate black holes in 51 low mass galaxies with z0.055z\le 0.055 {and mass up to 101010^{10} M_{\odot}} obtained by cross-correlating the NASA-SLOAN Atlas with the 3XMM catalogue. {We have also searched in the available catalogues for radio counterparts of the black hole candidates and find that 19 of the previously selected sources have also a radio counterpart.} Our results show that about 37%37\% of the galaxies of our sample host { an XX-ray source} (associated to a radio counterpart) spatially coincident with the galaxy center, in agreement with { other recent works}. For these {\it nuclear} sources, the XX-ray/radio fundamental plane relation allows one to estimate the mass of the (central) candidate black holes which results to be in the range 1042×10810^{4}-2\times10^{8} M_{\odot} (with median value of 3×107\simeq 3\times 10^7 M_{\odot} and eight candidates having mass below 10710^{7} M_{\odot}). This result, while suggesting that XX-ray emitting black holes in low-mass galaxies may have had a key role in the evolution of such systems, makes even more urgent to explain how such massive objects formed in galaxies. {Of course, dedicated follow-up observations both in the XX-ray and radio bands, as well as in the optical, are necessary in order to confirm our resultsComment: 15 Pages, 2 Figures, 3 Table

    XMM-Newton observation of a sample of four close dSph galaxies

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    We present the results of the analysis of deep archival \sat\ observations towards the dwarf spheroidal galaxies Draco, Leo I, Ursa Major II and Ursa Minor in the Milky Way neighbourhood. The X-ray source population is characterized and cross-correlated with available databases with the aim to infer their nature. We also investigate if intermediate-mass black holes are hosted in the center of these galaxies. In the case of Draco, we detect 96 high-energy sources, two of them being possibly local stars, while no evidence for any X-ray emitting central compact object is found. Towards the Leo I and UMa II field of view we reveal 116 and 49 X-ray sources, respectively. None of them correlates with the putative central black holes and only one is likely associated with a UMa II local source. The study of the UMi dwarf galaxy shows 54 high-energy sources and a possible association {with a source at the dSph center}. We put an upper limit to the central compact object luminosity of 4.02×\times1033^{33} erg/s. Furthermore, via the correlation with a radio source near the galactic center, we get that the putative black hole should have a mass of (2.762.54+32.00)×106M\left(2.76^{+32.00}_{-2.54}\right)\times10^6 M_{\odot} and be radiatively inefficient. This confirms a previous result obtained by using Chandra data alone.Comment: MNRAS, in press, tables available on lin

    Astrometric microlensing

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    Astrometric microlensing will offer in the next future a new channel for investigating the nature of both lenses and sources involved in a gravitational microlensing event. The effect, corresponding to the shift of the position of the multiple image centroid with respect to the source star location, is expected to occurr on scales from micro-arcoseconds to milli-arcoseconds depending on the characteristics of the lens-source system. Here, we consider different classes of events (single/binary lens acting on a single/binary source) also accounting for additional effects including the finite source size, the blending and orbital motion. This is particularly important in the era of Gaia observations which is making possible astrometric measurements with unprecedent quality.Comment: On IJMP D, 15 pages, 6 Figure
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