736 research outputs found
Is the Galactic bulge devoid of planets?
Considering a sample of 31 exoplanetary systems detected by gravitational
microlensing, we investigate whether or not the estimated distances to these
systems conform to the Galactic distribution of planets expected from models.
We derive the expected distribution of distances and relative proper motions
from a simulated microlensing survey, correcting for the dominant selection
effects that affect the planet detection sensitivity as a function of distance,
and compare it to the observed distribution using Anderson-Darling (AD)
hypothesis testing. Taking the relative abundance of planets in the bulge to
that in the disk, , as a model parameter, we find that our model
is only consistent with the observed distribution for (for
a -value threshold of 0.01) implying that the bulge may be devoid of planets
relative to the disk. Allowing for a dependence of planet abundance on
metallicity and host mass, or an additional dependence of planet sensitivity on
event timescale does not restore consistency for . We examine
the distance estimates of some events in detail, and conclude that some
parallax-based distance estimates could be significantly in error. Only by
combining the removal of one problematic event from our sample and the
inclusion of strong dependences of planet abundance or detection sensitivity on
host mass, metallicity and event timescale are we able to find consistency with
the hypothesis that the bulge and disk have equal planet abundance.Comment: Revised following referee's report. 12 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Proton spin structure and the axial U(1) problem
We emphasise the relation between the spin structure of the proton and the
axial U(1) problem. New experiments motivated by the proton spin problem which
could shed light on the nature of U(1) symmetry breaking in QCD are discussed.Comment: Invited talk at the Workshop on the Spin Structure of the Proton and
Polarized Collider Physics, Trento (July 23-28, 2001), 6 pages, 1 figur
Optimal Survey Strategies and Predicted Planet Yields for the Korean Microlensing Telescope Network
The Korean Microlensing Telescope Network (KMTNet) will consist of three 1.6m
telescopes each with a 4 deg^{2} field of view (FoV) and will be dedicated to
monitoring the Galactic Bulge to detect exoplanets via gravitational
microlensing. KMTNet's combination of aperture size, FoV, cadence, and
longitudinal coverage will provide a unique opportunity to probe exoplanet
demographics in an unbiased way. Here we present simulations that optimize the
observing strategy for, and predict the planetary yields of, KMTNet. We find
preferences for four target fields located in the central Bulge and an exposure
time of t_{exp} = 120s, leading to the detection of ~2,200 microlensing events
per year. We estimate the planet detection rates for planets with mass and
separation across the ranges 0.1 <= M_{p}/M_{Earth} <= 1000 and 0.4 <= a/AU <=
16, respectively. Normalizing these rates to the cool-planet mass function of
Cassan (2012), we predict KMTNet will be approximately uniformly sensitive to
planets with mass 5 <= M_{p}/M_{Earth} <= 1000 and will detect ~20 planets per
year per dex in mass across that range. For lower-mass planets with mass 0.1 <=
M_{p}/M_{Earth} < 5, we predict KMTNet will detect ~10 planets per year. We
also compute the yields KMTNet will obtain for free-floating planets (FFPs) and
predict KMTNet will detect ~1 Earth-mass FFP per year, assuming an underlying
population of one such planet per star in the Galaxy. Lastly, we investigate
the dependence of these detection rates on the number of observatories, the
photometric precision limit, and optimistic assumptions regarding seeing,
throughput, and flux measurement uncertainties.Comment: 29 pages, 31 figures, submitted to ApJ. For a brief video explaining
the key results of this paper, please visit:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5rWVjiO26
Di-electrons from meson Dalitz decay in proton-proton collisions
The reaction is discussed within a
covariant effective meson-nucleon theory. The model is adjusted to data of the
subreaction . Our focus is on di-electrons from Dalitz decays
of mesons, , and the role of
the corresponding transition form factor . Numerical
results are presented for the intermediate energy kinematics of HADES
experiments
Leptonic decays of the eta meson with the WASA detector at CELSIUS
Decay channels of the eta meson with at least one lepton pair in the final
state are discussed. Preliminary results on electron-positron pair production
from the pd->He eta reaction from the WASA experiment at CELSIUS are presented.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, prepared for Symposium on Meson Physics at
COSY-11 and WASA-at-COSY, Cracow, 17-22 June 200
OGLE-2018-BLG-0022: First Prediction of an Astrometric Microlensing Signal from a Photometric Microlensing Event
In this work, we present the analysis of the binary microlensing event OGLE-2018-BLG-0022 that is detected toward the Galactic bulge field. The dense and continuous coverage with the high-quality photometry data from ground-based observations combined with the space-based Spitzer observations of this long timescale event enables us to uniquely determine the masses M_1 = 0.40 ± 0.05 M⊙ and M_2 = 0.13 ± 0.01 M⊙ of the individual lens components. Because the lens-source relative parallax and the vector lens-source relative proper motion are unambiguously determined, we can likewise unambiguously predict the astrometric offset between the light centroid of the magnified images (as observed by the Gaia satellite) and the true position of the source. This prediction can be tested when the individual-epoch Gaia astrometric measurements are released
KMT-2016-BLG-2052L: Microlensing Binary Composed of M Dwarfs Revealed from a Very Long Timescale Event
We present the analysis of a binary microlensing event, KMT-2016-BLG-2052, for which the lensing-induced brightening of the source star lasted for two seasons. We determine the lens mass from the combined measurements of the microlens parallax, π_E, and angular Einstein radius, θ_E. The measured mass indicates that the lens is a binary composed of M dwarfs with masses of M_1 ~ 0.34 M⊙ and M_2 ~ 0.17 M⊙. The measured relative lens-source proper motion of μ ~ 3.9 mas yr^(−1) is smaller than ~5 mas yr−1 of typical Galactic lensing events, while the estimated angular Einstein radius of θ E ~ 1.2 mas is substantially greater than the typical value of ~0.5 mas. Therefore, it turns out that the long timescale of the event is caused by the combination of the slow μ and large θ_E rather than the heavy mass of the lens. From the simulation of Galactic lensing events with very long timescales (t_E ≳ 100 days), we find that the probabilities that long timescale events are produced by lenses with masses ≥1.0 M⊙ and ≥3.0 M⊙ are ~19% and 2.6%, respectively, indicating that events produced by heavy lenses comprise a minor fraction of long timescale events. The results indicate that it is essential to determine lens masses by measuring both π_E and θ_E in order to firmly identify heavy stellar remnants, such as neutron stars and black holes
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