454 research outputs found

    The impact of spheroid stars for Macho microlensing surveys of the Andromeda Galaxy

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    The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is an important test case for a number of microlensing surveys looking for massive compact halo objects (Machos). A long-standing theoretical prediction is that the high inclination of the M31 disk should induce an asymmetry in the spatial distribution of M31 Macho events, whilst the distribution of variable stars and microlensing events in the M31 disk should be symmetric. We examine the role of stars in the M31 visible spheroid as both lenses and sources to microlensing events. We compute microlensing event number density maps and estimate pixel-lensing rates and event durations for three-component models of M31 which are consistent with the observed rotation curve, surface brightness profile and dynamical mass estimates. Three extreme models are considered: a massive spheroid model; a massive disk model; and a massive Macho halo model. An important consequence of the spheroid is that, even if Machos are absent in M31, an asymmetric spatial signature is still generally expected from stellar lensing alone. The relative mass-to-light ratio of the spheroid and disk populations controls which of these signatures dominates the overall stellar spatial distribution. We find that the inclusion of the spheroid weakens the M31 Macho spatial asymmetry by about 20-30% over a disk-only asymmetry for the models considered. We also find for our models that Machos dominate over most of the far disk provided they contribute at least ~25% of the halo dark matter density. The presence of the spheroid also has beneficial consequences for M31 lensing surveys. The stellar asymmetry is likely to be important in distinguishing between a spheroidal Macho halo or a highly flattened halo or dark matter dominated disk, since spatial asymmetries of opposing signs are expected in these cases. (Abridged)Comment: 10 pages. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    The microlensing rate and distribution of free-floating planets towards the Galactic bulge

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    Ground-based optical microlensing surveys have provided tantalising, if inconclusive, evidence for a significant population of free-floating planets (FFPs). Both ground and space-based facilities are being used and developed which will be able to probe the distrubution of FFPs with much better sensitivity. It is vital also to develop a high-precision microlensing simulation framework to evaluate the completeness of such surveys. We present the first signal-to-noise limited calculations of the FFP microlensing rate using the Besancon Galactic model. The microlensing distribution towards the Galactic centre is simulated for wide-area ground-based optical surveys such as OGLE or MOA, a wide-area ground-based near-IR survey, and a targeted space-based near-IR survey which could be undertaken with Euclid or WFIRST. We present a calculation framework for the computation of the optical and near-infrared microlensing rate and optical depth for simulated stellar catalogues which are signal-to-noise limited, and take account of extinction, unresolved stellar background light and finite source size effects, which can be significant for FFPs. We find that the global ground-based I-band yield over a central 200 deg^2 region covering the Galactic centre ranges from 20 Earth-mass FFPs year^-1 up to 3,500 year^-1 for Jupiter FFPs in the limit of 100% detection efficiency, and almost an order of magnitude larger for a K-band survey. For ground-based surveys we find that the inclusion of finite source and the unresolved background reveals a mass-dependent variation in the spatial distribution of FFPs. For a space-based H-band covering 2 deg^2, the yield depends on the target field but maximizes close to the Galactic centre with around 76 Earth through to 1,700 Jupiter FFPs year^-1. For near-IR space-based surveys the spatial distribution of FFPs is found to be largely insensitive to the FFP mass scale.Comment: 14 pages, submitted to A&A and accepte

    Microlensing Halo Models with Abundant Brown Dwarfs

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    All previous attempts to understand the microlensing results towards the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) have assumed homogeneous present day mass functions (PDMFs) for the lensing populations. Here, we present an investigation into the microlensing characteristics of haloes with spatially varying PDMFs and anisotropic velocity dispersion tensors. One attractive possibility -- suggested by baryonic dark cluster formation in pregalactic and protogalactic cooling flows -- is that the inner halo is dominated by stellar mass objects, whereas low mass brown dwarfs become more prevalent on moving outwards. The contribution to the microlensing rate must be dominated by dark remnants (of about 0.5 solar masses) to recover the observed timescales of the microlensing experiments. But, even though stellar remnants control the rate, they do not dominate the mass of the baryonic halo, and so the well-known enrichment and mass budget problems are much less severe. Using a simple ansatz for the spatial variation of the PDMF, models are constructed in which the contribution of brown dwarfs to the mass of the baryonic halo is 55 % and to the total halo is 30 %. An unusual property of the models is that they predict that the average timescale of events towards M31 is shorter than the average timescale towards the LMC. This is because the longer line of sight towards M31 probes more of the far halo where brown dwarfs are the most common constituent.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, in press at The Astrophysical Journal (Letters

    Reference image selection for difference imaging analysis

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    Difference image analysis (DIA) is an effective technique for obtaining photometry in crowded fields, relative to a chosen reference image. As yet, however, optimal reference image selection is an unsolved problem. We examine how this selection depends on the combination of seeing, background and detector pixel size. Our tests use a combination of simulated data and quality indicators from DIA of well-sampled optical data and under-sampled near-infrared data from the OGLE and VVV surveys, respectively. We search for a figure-of-merit (FoM) which could be used to select reference images for each survey. While we do not find a universally applicable FoM, survey-specific measures indicate that the effect of spatial under-sampling may require a change in strategy from the standard DIA approach, even though seeing remains the primary criterion. We find that background is not an important criterion for reference selection, at least for the dynamic range in the images we test. For our analysis of VVV data in particular, we find that spatial under-sampling is best handled by reversing the standard DIA procedure and convolving target images to a better-sampled (poor seeing) reference image.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Latest results from the POINT-AGAPE pixel-lensing survey of the Andromeda Galaxy

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    I report on recent results from the POINT-AGAPE pixel-lensing experiment, which is engaged in a search towards the Andromeda galaxy (M31) for gravitational microlensing signatures from massive compact halo objects (Machos). An analysis of two years of data reveals over 360 light-curves compatible with microlensing. The third year of data, currently being analysed, will be crucial in determining how many of these candidates are long-period variables rather than microlensing. Within the dataset we have isolated a subset of four high signal-to-noise ratio, short duration events which are compelling microlensing candidates. The properties and possible origins of these events are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Proceedings contribution for the 4th International Workshop on "The Identification of Dark Matter", York, September 2nd - 6th 200

    Analysis of a Hubble Space Telescope Search for Red Dwarfs: Limits on Baryonic Matter in the Galactic Halo

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    We re-examine a deep {\it Hubble Space Telescope} pencil-beam search for red dwarfs, stars just massive enough to burn Hydrogen. The authors of this search (Bahcall, Flynn, Gould \& Kirhakos 1994) found that red dwarfs make up less than 6\% of the galactic halo. First, we extrapolate this result to include brown dwarfs, stars not quite massive enough to burn hydrogen; we assume a 1/M1/{\cal M} mass function. Then the total mass of red dwarfs and brown dwarfs is ≀\leq18\% of the halo. This result is consistent with microlensing results assuming a popular halo model. However, using new stellar models and parallax observations of low mass, low metallicity stars, we obtain much tighter bounds on low mass stars. We find the halo red dwarf density to be <1%<1\% of the halo, while our best estimate of this value is 0.14-0.37\%. Thus our estimate of the halo mass density of red dwarfs drops to 16-40 times less than the reported result of Bahcall et al (1994). For a 1/M1/{\cal M} mass function, this suggests a total density of red dwarfs and brown dwarfs of ∌\sim0.25-0.67\% of the halo, \ie , (0.9-2.5)\times 10^9\msun out to 50 kpc. Such a low result would conflict with microlensing estimates by the \macho\ group (Alcock \etal 1995a,b).Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures. Figure one only available via fax or snail-mail To be published in ApJL. fig. 2 now available in postscript. Some minor changes in dealing with disk forground. Some cosmetic changes. Updated reference
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