Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-5nwft Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-11T08:17:54.546Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Microlensing: A Tool to Probe Distant Binary Populations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2016

Rosanne Di Stefano*
Affiliation:
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Tufts University, Medford, MA 02155 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA 02138

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Programs designed to observe gravitational microlensing are poised to provide a great deal of information about binary populations far from Earth, including those in the Galactic Bulge, in the Magellanic Clouds, in M31, and perhaps in other external galaxies. Because many millions of stars are monitored, microlensing observations allow us to study binaries in three ways: (1) when they are “involved” in a microlensing event (as either a lens or lensed source), (2) when variability due to binarity produces significant variations in the light curve, and (3) when light from a more distant star is attenuated or refracted by matter associated with the binary system (e.g., in a disk).

Microlensing observations will discover large numbers of binaries and planetary systems in a variety of galactic environments. Thus, comparative statistical studies of binary properties (distributions of mass ratios and orbital separations) are possible.

An intriguing sign that we have already begun to learn about binaries through microlensing observations comes from work indicating that all of the lenses detected to date may in fact be binaries. For observations along the direction of the Magellanic Clouds this would imply that, if the lenses are primarily located in the Halo, then MACHOs tend to be binaries. If, on the other hand, most of the lenses are located in the Magellanic Clouds, microlensing observations are giving us a unique way to explore a distant stellar population of binaries.

Type
XIV. Frontiers of Observations
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of the Pacific 2001 

References

Afonso, C., et al. 2000, ApJ, 532, 340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alard, C., Mao, S., & Guibert, J. 1995, A&A, 300L, 17.Google Scholar
Albrow, M., et al. 1998 ApJ, 509, 687.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alcock, C., et al. 2000, astro-ph/0001272.Google Scholar
Alcock, C., et al. 1999, astro-ph/9907369.Google Scholar
Alcock, C., et al. 1997a, ApJ, 486, 697.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alcock, C., et al. 1997b, ApJ, 479, 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DiStefano, R. 2000, ApJ, 541, 587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DiStefano, R. 1999, astro-ph/9901035.Google Scholar
DiStefano, R., & Scalzo, R. A. 1999, ApJ, 512, 564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DiStefano, R., & Scalzo, R. A. 1999, ApJ, 512, 579.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DiStefano, R., & Keeton, C. R. 2000, in prep.Google Scholar
Draine, B. T. 1998, ApJ, 509, 41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gould, A., & Loeb, A. 1992, ApJ, 396, 104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greiner, J., Tovmassian, G. H., DiStefano, R., et al. 1999, A&A 343, 183.Google Scholar
Kaluzny, J, et al. 1998, A&AS, 128, 19.Google Scholar
Kaluzny, J, et al. 1997, A&AS, 125, 343.Google Scholar
Kaluzny, J, et al. 1997, A&AS, 122, 471.Google Scholar
Kaluzny, J., Thompson, I., Krzeminski, W., Pych, W. 1999, A&A, 350, 469.Google Scholar
Mao, S., & Paczyński, B. 1991, ApJ, 374, L37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olech, A. et al. 1999, MNRAS, 310, 7590.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pietrzynski, G., Kubiak, M., Udalski, A., Szymanski, M. 1997, AcA, 47, 437.Google Scholar
Pietrzynski, G., Kubiak, M., Udalski, A., Szymanski, M. 1998, AcA, 48, 489.Google Scholar
Udalski, A. et al. 1994, ApJ, 436, L103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Udalski, A. et al. 1998, AcA, 48, 563.Google Scholar