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Predicting astrometric microlensing events from Gaia Data Release 3

Su, Jie et al., 2024, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 527, 1177 | View on ADS (2024MNRAS.527.1177S)

Abstract

Currently, astrometric microlensing is the only tool that can directly measure the mass of a single star; it can also help us to detect compact objects such as isolated neutron stars and black holes. The number of microlensing events that are being predicted and reported is increasing. In this paper, potential lens stars are selected from three types of stars: high-proper-motion stars, nearby stars, and high-mass stars. For each potential lens star, we select a larger search scope to find possible matching sources and to avoid missing events as much as possible. Using data from Gaia Data Release 3, we predict 4500 astrometric microlensing events with δθ+ > 0.1 mas, which occur between J2010.0 and J2070.0, where 1664 events are different from those found previously. There are 293 lens stars that can cause two or more events, where five lens stars can cause more than 50 events. We find that 116 events have the distance of background stars from the proper motion path of lens stars more than 8 arcsec in the reference epoch, where the maximum distance is 16${_{.}^{\prime\prime}}$6. Thus, the cone search method of expanding the search range of sources for each potential lens star can reduce the possibility of missing events.

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