Observational Evidence for the Effect of Amplification Bias in Gravitational Microlensing Experiments
Preprint
- 26 April 1998
Abstract
Recently Alard\markcite{alard1996} proposed to detect the shift of a star's image centroid, $\delta x$, as a method to identify the lensed source among blended stars. Goldberg & Wo\'zniak\markcite{goldberg1997} actually applied this method to the OGLE-1 database and found that 7 out of 15 events showed significant centroid shifts of $\delta x \gtrsim 0.2$ arcsec. The amount of centroid shift has been estimated theoretically by Goldberg.\markcite{goldberg1997} However, he treated the problem in general and did not apply it to a particular survey or field, and thus based his estimates on simple toy model luminosity functions (i.e., power laws). In this paper, we construct the expected distribution of $\delta x$ for Galactic bulge events by using the precise stellar LF observed by Holtzman et al.\markcite{holtzman1998} using HST. Their LF is complete up to $M_I\sim 9.0$ ($M_V\sim 12$), corresponding to faint M-type stars. In our analysis we find that regular blending cannot produce a large fraction of events with measurable centroid shifts. By contrast, a significant fraction of events would have measurable centroid shifts if they are affected by amplification-bias blending. Therefore, Goldberg & Wo\'zniak's measurements of large centroid shifts for a large fraction of microlensing events confirms the prediction of Han and Alard that a large fraction of Galactic bulge events are affected by amplification-bias blending.
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- Version 1, 1998-04-26, ArXiv
- Published version: The Astrophysical Journal, 507 (1), 102.
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