MOA 2003‐BLG‐37: A Bulge Jerk‐Parallax Microlens Degeneracy
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2004 papers
Abstract
We analyze the Galactic bulge microlensing event MOA-2003-BLG-37. Although the Einstein timescale is relatively short, t_e=43 days, the lightcurve displays deviations consistent with parallax effects due to the Earth's accelerated motion. We show that the chi^2 surface has four distinct local minima that are induced by the ``jerk-parallax'' degeneracy, with pairs of solutions having projected Einstein radii, \tilde r_e = 1.76 AU and 1.28 AU, respectively. This is the second event displaying such a degeneracy and the first toward the Galactic bulge. For both events, the jerk-parallax formalism accurately describes the offsets between the different solutions, giving hope that when extra solutions exist in future events, they can easily be found. However, the morphologies of the chi^2 surfaces for the two events are quite different, implying that much remains to be understood about this degeneracy.
Related Papers
- → The MACHO Project: 45 Candidate Microlensing Events from the First Year Galactic Bulge Data(1997)179 cited
- → Bulge microlensing optical depth from EROS 2 observations $^{\bullet}$(2003)77 cited
- → The Optical Depth to Gravitational Microlensing in the Direction of the Galactic Bulge(1994)4 cited
- → Real-Time Spectroscopy of Gravitational Microlensing Events - Probing the Evolution of the Galactic Bulge(1997)1 cited
- → Bulge Microlensing Optical Depth from EROS 2 observations(2003)1 cited