9 research outputs found
The Applicability of the Astrometric Method in Determining the Physical Parameters of Gravitational Microlenses
In this paper, we investigate the applicability of the astrometric method to
the determination of the lens parameters for gravitational microlensing events
toward both the LMC and the Galactic bulge. For this analysis, we investigate
the dependency of the astrometrically determined angular Einstein ring radius,
, on the lens parameters by testing
various types of events. In addition, by computing for events with lensing parameters which are the most
probable for a given lens mass under the standard models of Galactic matter
density and velocity distributions, we determine the expected distribution of
the uncertainties as a function of lens mass. From this study, we find that the
values of the angular Einstein ring radius are expected to be measured with
uncertainties up to a
lens mass of for both Galactic disk-bulge and halo-LMC
events with a moderate observational strategy. The uncertainties are relatively
large for Galactic bulge-bulge self-lensing events, for , but they can be
substantially reduced by adopting more aggressive observational strategies. We
also find that although astrometric observations can be performed for most
photometrically detected Galactic bulge events, a significant fraction () of LMC events cannot be astrometrically observed due to the faintness of
their source stars.Comment: 16 pages, including 2 tables and 4 figures, submitted to Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Socirt
Blending in Future Space-based Microlensing Surveys
We investigate the effect of blending in future gravitational microlensing
surveys by carrying out simulation of Galactic bulge microlensing events to be
detected from a proposed space-based lensing survey. From this simulation, we
find that the contribution of the flux from background stars to the total
blended flux will be equivalent to that from the lens itself despite the
greatly improved resolution from space observations, implying that
characterizing lenses from the analysis of the blended flux would not be easy.
As a method to isolate events for which most of the blended flux is
attributable to the lens, we propose to use astrometric information of source
star image centroid motion. For the sample of events obtained by imposing a
criterion that the centroid shift should be less than three times of the
astrometric uncertainty among the events for which blending is noticed with
blended light fractions , we estimate that the contamination of
the blended flux by background stars will be less than 20% for most () of the sample events. The expected rate of these events is
events/yr, which is large enough for the statistical analysis of the lens
populations.Comment: total 6 pages, including 5 figures, ApJ, in pres
Signs of Planetary Microlensing Signals
An extrasolar planet can be detected via microlensing from the perturbation
it makes in the smooth lensing light curve of the primary. In addition to the
conventional photometric microlensing, astrometric observation of the
center-of-light motion of the source star image provides a new channel of
detecting and characterizing extrasolar planets. It was known that the
planet-induced astrometric signals tend to be positive while the photometric
signals can be either positive or negative. In this paper, we analytically show
the reason for these tendencies of microlensing planetary signals.Comment: accepted in Astrophysical Journa
Improved Detection Rates for Close Binaries Via Astrometric Observations of Gravitational Microlensing Events
In addition to constructing a Galactic matter mass function free from the
bias induced by the hydrogen-burning limit, gravitational microlensing allows
one to construct a mass function which is less affected by the problem of
unresolved binaries (Gaudi & Gould). However, even with the method of
microlensing, the photometric detection of binaries is limited to binary
systems with relatively large separations of of their combined
Einstein ring radius, and thus the mass function is still not totally free from
the problem of unresolved binaries. In this paper, we show that by detecting
distortions of the astrometric ellipse of a microlensing event with high
precision instruments such as the {\it Space Interferometry Mission}, one can
detect close binaries at a much higher rate than by the photometric method. We
find that by astrometrically observing microlensing events, of
binaries with separations of can be detected with the detection
threshold of 3%. The proposed astrometric method is especially efficient at
detecting very close binaries. With a detection threshold of 3% and a rate of
10%, one can astrometrically detect binaries with separations down to .Comment: total 14 pages, including 5 Figures and no Table (For figure 1,
please send a request mail to [email protected]), accepted to
ApJ (Vol 525, 000), updated versio
Properties of Microlensing Light Curve Anomalies Induced by Multiple Planets
In this paper, we show that the pattern of microlensing light curve anomalies
induced by multiple planets are well described by the superposition of those of
the single-planet systems where the individual planet-primary binary pairs act
as independent lens systems. Since the outer deviation regions around the
planetary caustics of the individual planets occur in general at different
locations, we find that the pattern of anomalies in these regions are hardly
affected by the existence of other planet(s). This implies that even if an
event is caused by a multiple planetary system, a simple single-planet lensing
model is good enough for the description of most anomalies caused by the source
passage of the outer deviation regions. Detection of the anomalies resulting
from the source trajectory passing both the outer deviation regions caused by
more than two planets will provide a new channel of detecting multiple planets.Comment: total 13 pages, including 6 figures and no table, MNRAS, submitted,
for better quality pdf file is avalilable at
http://astroph.chungbuk.ac.kr/~cheongho/publication.htm
Properties of Central Caustics in Planetary Microlensing
To maximize the number of planet detections, current microlensing follow-up
observations are focusing on high-magnification events which have a higher
chance of being perturbed by central caustics. In this paper, we investigate
the properties of central caustics and the perturbations induced by them. We
derive analytic expressions of the location, size, and shape of the central
caustic as a function of the star-planet separation, , and the planet/star
mass ratio, , under the planetary perturbative approximation and compare the
results with those based on numerical computations. While it has been known
that the size of the planetary caustic is \propto \sqrt{q}, we find from this
work that the dependence of the size of the central caustic on is linear,
i.e., \propto q, implying that the central caustic shrinks much more rapidly
with the decrease of compared to the planetary caustic. The central-caustic
size depends also on the star-planet separation. If the size of the caustic is
defined as the separation between the two cusps on the star-planet axis
(horizontal width), we find that the dependence of the central-caustic size on
the separation is \propto (s+1/s). While the size of the central caustic
depends both on and q, its shape defined as the vertical/horizontal width
ratio, R_c, is solely dependent on the planetary separation and we derive an
analytic relation between R_c and s. Due to the smaller size of the central
caustic combined with much more rapid decrease of its size with the decrease of
q, the effect of finite source size on the perturbation induced by the central
caustic is much more severe than the effect on the perturbation induced by the
planetary caustic. Abridged.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, ApJ accepte