Back to Search Start Over

Spitzer + VLTI-GRAVITY Measure the Lens Mass of a Nearby Microlensing Event

Authors :
Zang, Weicheng
Dong, Subo
Gould, Andrew
Novati, Sebastiano Calchi
Chen, Ping
Yang, Hongjing
Li, Shun-Sheng
Mao, Shude
Alton, K. B.
Carey, Sean
Christie, G. W.
Delplancke-Ströbele, F.
Feliz, Dax L.
Green, J.
Hu, Shaoming
Jayasinghe, T.
Koff, R. A.
Kurtenkov, A.
Mérand, A.
Minev, Milen
Mutel, Robert
Natusch, T.
Roth, Tyler
Shvartzvald, Yossi
Sun, Fengwu
Vanmunster, T.
Zhu, Wei
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We report the lens mass and distance measurements of the nearby microlensing event TCP J05074264+2447555. We measure the microlens parallax vector ${\pi}_{\rm E}$ using Spitzer and ground-based light curves with constraints on the direction of lens-source relative proper motion derived from Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) GRAVITY observations. Combining this ${\pi}_{\rm E}$ determination with the angular Einstein radius $\theta_{\rm E}$ measured by VLTI GRAVITY observations, we find that the lens is a star with mass $M_{\rm L} = 0.495 \pm 0.063~M_{\odot}$ at a distance $D_{\rm L} = 429 \pm 21~{\rm pc}$. We find that the blended light basically all comes from the lens. The lens-source proper motion is $\mu_{\rm rel,hel} = 26.55 \pm 0.36~{\rm mas\,yr^{-1}}$, so with currently available adaptive-optics (AO) instruments, the lens and source can be resolved in 2021. This is the first microlensing event whose lens mass is unambiguously measured by interferometry + satellite parallax observations, which opens a new window for mass measurements of isolated objects such as stellar-mass black holes.<br />Comment: 3 Figures and 6 Tables Submitted to AAS Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1912.00038
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab9749