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Stellar, Remnant, Planetary, and Dark-Object Masses from Astrometric MicrolensingThe primary goal of our project is to make a complete census of the stellar population of the Galaxy. We are broadening the term stellar here to include both ordinary stars and dark stars. Ordinary stars, burning their nuclear fuel and shining, can perhaps best be studied with traditional astronomical techniques, but dark stars, by which we include old brown dwarfs, black holes, old white dwarfs, neutron stars, and perhaps exotic objects such as mirror matter stars or primordial black holes, can only be studied by their gravitational effects. Traditionally, these objects have been probed in binaries, and thus selected in a way that may or may not be representative of their respective field populations. The only way to examine the field population of these stars is through microlensing, the deflection of light from a visible star in the background by an object (dark or not) in the foreground. When lensed, there are two images of the background star. Although these images cannot be resolved when the lens has a stellar mass, the lensing effect can be detected in two ways: photometrically, i.e. by measuring the magnification of the source by the lens, and astrometrically, i.e. by measuring the shift in the centroid of the two images. Photometric microlensing experiments have detected hundreds of microlensing events over the past decade. Despite its successes, photometric microlensing has so far been somewhat frustrating because these events are difficult to interpret. Almost nothing is known about the masses of individual lenses and very little is known about the statistical properties of the lenses treated as a whole, such as their average mass. Although probably over 100 of the lenses are in fact dark objects, we can't determine which they are, let alone investigate finer details such as what their masses are, and where they are in the Galaxy. With SIM, we will break the microlensing degeneracy, and allow detailed interpretation of individual microlensing events. We will thus develop a detailed census of the dark and luminous stellar population of the Galaxy.
Document ID
20050186754
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Other
Authors
Gould, Andrew P.
(Ohio State Univ. OH, United States)
Bennett, David P.
(Notre Dame Univ. IN, United States)
Boden, Andrew
(Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Depoy, Darren L.
(Ohio State Univ. OH, United States)
Gaudi, Scott B.
(Ohio State Univ. OH, United States)
Griest, Kim
(California Univ., San Diego La Jolla, CA, United States)
Han, Cheongho
(Chungbuk National Univ. Korea, Republic of)
Paczynski, Bohdan
(Princeton Univ. NJ, United States)
Reid, I. Neill
(Pennsylvania Univ. Philadelphia, PA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 2004
Publication Information
Publication: SIM PlanetQuest: Science with the Space Interferometry Mission
Subject Category
Astronomy
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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