12 research outputs found
Observation of the first gravitational microlensing event in a sparse stellar field : the Tago event
We report the observation of the first gravitational microlensing event in a
sparse stellar field, involving the brightest (V=11.4 mag) andclosest (~ 1 kpc)
source star to date. This event was discovered by an amateurastronomer, A.
Tago, on 2006 October 31 as a transient brightening, by ~4.5 mag during a ~15
day period, of a normal A-type star (GSC 3656-1328) in the Cassiopeia
constellation. Analysis of both spectroscopic observations and the light curve
indicates that this event was caused by gravitational microlensing rather than
an intrinsically variable star. Discovery of this single event over a 30 year
period is roughly consistent with the expected microlensing rate for the whole
sky down to V = 12 mag stars. However, the probability for finding events with
such a high magnification (~ 50) is much smaller, by a factor ~1/50, which
implies that the true event rate may be higher than expected. This discovery
indicates the potential of all sky variability surveys, employing frequent
sampling by telescopes with small apertures and wide fields of view, for
finding such rare transient events, and using the observations to explore
galactic disk structure and search for exo-planets.Comment: 13 pages, 2 tables, 3 figures, accepted by Ap
Tokai Radioactive Ion Accelerator Complex (TRIAC)
An ISOL-based radioactive nuclear beam (RNB) facility,
Tokai Radioactive Ion Accelerator Complex (TRIAC),
has been jointly developed
by High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK)
and Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA).
The facility started to supply RNBs for experiments in 2005
and RNBs including fission fragments with energies up to 1.1MeV/A
are available in the present.
Several experimental studies were performed successfully
using 8Li beams
with various energies