The MACHO project: Microlensing results from 5.7 years of Large Magellanic Cloud observations

Alcock, C; Allsman, RA; Alves, DR; Axelrod, TS; Becker, AC; Bennett, DP; Cook, KH; Dalal, N; Drake, AJ; Freeman, KC; Geha, M; Griest, K; Lehner, MJ; Marshall, SL; Minniti, D; et. al.

Abstract

We report on our search for microlensing toward the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). Analysis of 5.7 yr of photometry on 11.9 million stars in the LMC reveals 13-17 microlensing events. A detailed treatment of our detection efficiency shows that this is significantly more than the similar to2-4 events expected from lensing by known stellar populations. The timescales ((t) over cap) of the events range from 34 to 230 days. We estimate the microlensing optical depth toward the LMC from events with 2 < <(t)over cap> < 400 days to be (400)(2) = 1.2(-0.3)(+0.4) x 10(-7), with an additional 20% to 30% of systematic error. The spatial distribution of events is mildly inconsistent with LMC/LMC disk self-lensing, but is consistent with an extended lens distribution such as a Milky Way or LMC halo. Interpreted in the context of a Galactic dark matter halo, consisting partially of compact objects, a maximum-likelihood analysis gives a MACHO halo fraction of 20% for a typical halo model with a 95% confidence interval of 8%-50%. A 100% MACHO halo is ruled out at the 95% confidence level for all except our most extreme halo model. Interpreted as a Galactic halo population, the most likely MACHO mass is between 0.15 and 0.9 Mo, depending on the halo model, and the total mass in MACHOs out to 50 kpc is found to be 9(-3)(+4) x 10(10) M., independent of the halo model. These results are marginally consistent with our previous results, but are lower by about a factor of 2. This is mostly due to Poisson noise, because with 3.4 times more exposure and increased sensitivity to long-timescale events, we did not find the expected factor of similar to4 more events. In addition to a larger data set, this work also includes an improved efficiency determination, improved likelihood analysis, and more thorough testing of systematic errors, especially with respect to the treatment of potential backgrounds to microlensing. We note that an important source of background are supernovae (SNe) in galaxies behind the LMC.

Más información

Título según WOS: The MACHO project: Microlensing results from 5.7 years of Large Magellanic Cloud observations
Título de la Revista: ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volumen: 542
Número: 1
Editorial: IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2000
Página de inicio: 281
Página final: 307
Idioma: English
URL: http://stacks.iop.org/0004-637X/542/i=1/a=281
DOI:

10.1086/309512

Notas: ISI