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Microlensing Surveys for Finding Planets

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Analysis may suggest optimum sampling time. Photometry follow-up for planets ... Other potential needs. Verification of follow-up. Optimum resource allocation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microlensing Surveys for Finding Planets


1
Microlensing Surveys for Finding Planets
  • Kem Cook
  • LLNL/NOAO

With thanks to Dave Bennett for most of these
slides
2
Microlensing Surveys Ushered in the Current Era
of time-domain surveys
  • MACHO, OGLE, EROS started in the early 1990s
  • Microlensing search needed repeated observations
    of millions of stars
  • Simple point-source point-lens detected and
    proved the principle
  • Huge databases of light curves over 1000s of days
    for millions of stars
  • Anomalous microlensing detected--binary lensing
  • Extreme binary system is star and planet
  • Follow-up collaborations formed to detect planets
    in 1995
  • PLANET collaboration
  • Probing Lensing Anomalies NETwork
  • MPS collaboration
  • Microlensing Planet Survey
  • Current follow-up
  • PLANET
  • MicroFUN
  • Current Galactic Surveys
  • OGLE
  • MOA

3
PLANET Telescope System
Collaboration member telescopes
MOU in place with RoboNet
4
The Physics of Microlensing
  • Foreground lens star planet bend light of
    source star
  • Multiple distorted images
  • Total brightness change is observable
  • Sensitive to planetary mass
  • Low mass planet signals are rare not weak
  • Peak sensitivity is at 2-3 AU the Einstein ring
    radius, RE
  • 1st Discovery from Ground-based observations
    announced already

5
Lensed images at ?arcsec resolution
A planet can be discovered when one of the lensed
images approaches its projected
position. Animation from Scott Gaudi
6
Simulated Planetary Light Curves
  • Planetary signals can be very strong
  • There are a variety of light curve features to
    indicate the planetary mass ratio and separation
  • Exposures every 10-15 minutes
  • The small deviation at day 42.75 is due to a
    moon of 1.6 lunar masses.

7
Microlensing surveys need VOEvents
  • Alert to new microlensing events
  • Currently done via email and web post
  • Multiple surveys mean possible confusion
  • Analysis of ongoing events suggests anomaly
  • Email anomaly alerts (2nd level alerts)
  • Analysis may suggest optimum sampling time
  • Photometry follow-up for planets
  • Spectroscopic follow-up
  • Spatial resolution of source star (eg limb
    darkening)
  • Multiplication of source star flux
  • Current follow-up networks use email, telephone
    and web pages to relay information

8
1st Exoplanet Discovery by ?lensing
The OGLE 2003-BLG-235/MOA 2003-BLG-53 light curve
(Bond et al, 2004). The right hand panel shows a
close-up of the region of the planetary caustic.
The theoretical light curves shown are the best
fit planetary microlensing light curve (solid
black curve indicating a mass ratio of q
0.0039), another planetary mass binary lens light
curve (green curve with q 0.0069), and the best
fit non-planetary binary lens light curve
(magenta dashed curve), which has q gt 0.03.
9
MOA/OGLE Planetary Event
Best fit light curve simulated on an OGLE image
10
2nd Exoplanet Discovery by ?lensing
OGLE 2005-BLG-71 (Udalski, Jaroszynski, et al -
OGLE ?FUN. Addl data from MOA PLANET).
Central caustic light curve perturbation (d
1.3 or 1/1.3)
Data from OGLE, ?FUN, PLANET MOA
Additional planet discoveries by PLANET, MOA
OGLE, also in preparation
11
3rd Exoplanet Discovery by ?lensing
Short duration deviation suggests planetary mass
ratio binary--details in Nature, January 2006
12
Exoplanets via Gravitational Microlensing
  • Planetary signal strength independent of mass
  • if Mplanet/M ? 3?10-7
  • low-mass planet signals are brief and rare
  • 10 photometric variations
  • required photometric accuracy demonstrated
  • Mplanet/M, separation (w/ a factor of 2
    accuracy)
  • Mplanet and M measured separately in gt 30 of
    cases
  • follow-up observations measure Mplanet , M,
    separation for most G, K, and some M star lenses
  • finds free-floating planets, too

13
Planetary Parameters from Microlensing
  • Mass ratio planetary separation in Einstein
    radius units
  • Radial velocity planets only give mass ratio ?
    sin(I)
  • But the properties of the source star are well
    known for radial velocities!
  • High resolution observations can reveal source
    star
  • Light curve fit gives source star brightness
  • HST observations may reveal a source apparently
    brighter than required by the fit - due to light
    from the lens
  • Pending HST DD proposal by Gould, Bennett
    Udalski
  • Favorable case due to long timescale event and
    indications of blending in ground-based
    photometry - could be K dwarf at 2 kpc
  • 30-50 of events have detectable sources
  • Future JWST or AO observations will confirm the
    lens star ID and determine the lens-source proper
    motion (10 years later)
  • Measurement of microlensing parallax plus finite
    source effect gives planetary mass directly
  • Weak parallax detection for OGLE-235/MOA-53 gives
    mass between 0.06 and 0.7 M? (Bennett Gould,
    in preparation)
  • MOA upgrade from 0.6m to 1.8m telescope and
    increased OGLE sampling rate should improve data
    for future events

14
Comparison of Planet Detection Techniques
  • Transit detection planetary systems are blue
    boxes
  • Microlensing from ground or space quite
    competitive
  • MPF is a proposed satellite microlensing mission
  • Microlensing discoveries are purple dots

Updated from Bennett Rhie (2002) ApJ 574, 985
15
VOEvent and Microlensing
  • VOEvent will simplify communication
  • Between surveys and follow-up
  • Within a follow-up team
  • Among follow-up teams
  • VOEvent content needed for
  • Anomaly type
  • Prediction of behavior
  • Prioritization of follow-up
  • Other potential needs
  • Verification of follow-up
  • Optimum resource allocation
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