Back to Search Start Over

Binary Microlensing Events from the MACHO Project

Authors :
Alcock, Charles
Allsman, Robyn
Alves, David R
Axelrod, Tim
Baines, D
Becker, Andrew C
Bennett, D P
Bourke, A
Brakel, A
Cook, Kem H
Crook, B
Crouch, A
Dan, J
Drake, Andrew John
Fragile, P C
Freeman, Kenneth
Gal-Yam, Avishay
Geha, M
Gray, J
Griest, K
Gurtierrez, A
Heller, A
Howard, Judith A K
Johnson, B Ronald
Kaspi, S
Keane, Michael Andrew
Kovo, O
Leach, C
Leach, T
Leibowitz, E
Lehner, M J
Lipkin, Y
Maoz, D
Marshall, S L
Mcdowell, D
McKeown, S
Mendelson, H
Messenger, B
Minniti, Dante
Nelson, C A
Peterson, Bruce
Popowski, P
Pozza, E
Purcell, P
Pratt, M
Quinn, J M W
Quinn, Peter J
Rhie, S.
Rodgers, Alexander
Salmon, A
Shemmer, Ohad
Stetson, Peter B
Stubbs, Christopher W
Sutherland, William J
Thomson, S
Tomaney, A B
Vandehei, T
Walker, A
Ward, K
Wyper, G
Alcock, Charles
Allsman, Robyn
Alves, David R
Axelrod, Tim
Baines, D
Becker, Andrew C
Bennett, D P
Bourke, A
Brakel, A
Cook, Kem H
Crook, B
Crouch, A
Dan, J
Drake, Andrew John
Fragile, P C
Freeman, Kenneth
Gal-Yam, Avishay
Geha, M
Gray, J
Griest, K
Gurtierrez, A
Heller, A
Howard, Judith A K
Johnson, B Ronald
Kaspi, S
Keane, Michael Andrew
Kovo, O
Leach, C
Leach, T
Leibowitz, E
Lehner, M J
Lipkin, Y
Maoz, D
Marshall, S L
Mcdowell, D
McKeown, S
Mendelson, H
Messenger, B
Minniti, Dante
Nelson, C A
Peterson, Bruce
Popowski, P
Pozza, E
Purcell, P
Pratt, M
Quinn, J M W
Quinn, Peter J
Rhie, S.
Rodgers, Alexander
Salmon, A
Shemmer, Ohad
Stetson, Peter B
Stubbs, Christopher W
Sutherland, William J
Thomson, S
Tomaney, A B
Vandehei, T
Walker, A
Ward, K
Wyper, G
Source :
Astrophysical Journal, The
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

We present the light curves of 21 gravitational microlensing events from the first six years of the MACHO Project gravitational microlensing survey that are likely examples of lensing by binary systems. These events were manually selected from a total sample of ∼350 candidate microlensing events that were either detected by the MACHO Alert System or discovered through retrospective analyses of the MACHO database. At least 14 of these 21 events exhibit strong (caustic) features, and four of the events are well fit with lensing by large mass ratio (brown dwarf or planetary) systems, although these fits are not necessarily unique. The total binary event rate is roughly consistent with predictions based upon our knowledge of the properties of binary stars, but a precise comparison cannot be made without a determination of our binary lens event detection efficiency. Toward the Galactic bulge, we find a ratio of caustic crossing to noncaustic crossing binary lensing events of 12:4, excluding one event for which we present two fits. This suggests significant incompleteness in our ability to detect and characterize non-caustic crossing binary lensing. The distribution of mass ratios, N(q), for these binary lenses appears relatively flat. We are also able to reliably measure source-face crossing times in four of the bulge caustic crossing events, and recover from them a distribution of lens proper motions, masses, and distances consistent with a population of Galactic bulge lenses at a distance of 7 ± 1 kpc. This analysis yields two systems with companions of ∼0.05 M⊙.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Astrophysical Journal, The
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1291817874
Document Type :
Electronic Resource