A Binary Lensing Event Toward the LMC: Observations and Dark Matter Implications
/ Authors
D.P.Bennett, C.Alcock, R.A.Allsman, D.Alves, T.S.Axelrod, A.Becker, K.H.Cook, K.C.Freeman, K.Griest, J.Guern
and 11 more authors
M.J.Lehner, S.L.Marshall, D.Minniti, B.A.Peterson, M.R.Pratt, P.J.Quinn, S.H.Rhie, A.W.Rodgers, C.W.Stubbs, W.Sutherland, D.Welch
/ Abstract
The MACHO collaboration has recently analyzed 2.1 years of photometric data for about 8.5 million stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). This analysis has revealed 8 candidate microlensing events and a total microlensing optical depth of τ meas = 2 . 9 +1 . 4 − 0 . 9 × 10 − 7 . This significantly exceeds the number of events (1.1) and the microlensing optical depth predicted from known stellar populations: τ back = 5 . 4 × 10 − 8 , but it is consistent with models in which about half of the standard dark halo mass is composed of Machos of mass ∼ 0 . 5M ⊙ . One of these 8 events appears to be a binary lensing event with a caustic crossing that is partially resolved, and the measured caustic crossing time allows us to estimate the distance to the lenses. Under the assumption that the source star is a single star and not a short period binary, we show that the lensing objects are very likely to reside in the LMC. However, if we assume that the optical depth for LMC-LMC lensing is large enough to account for our entire lensing signal, then the binary event does not appear to be consistent with lensing of a single LMC source star by a binary residing in the LMC. Thus, while the binary lens may indeed reside in the LMC, there is no indication that most of the lenses reside in the LMC.