SIMBAD references

2001MNRAS.325..305A - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 325, 305-311 (2001/July-3)

Gravitational microlensing of planets: the influence of planetary phase and caustic orientation.

ASHTON C.E. and LEWIS G.F.

Abstract (from CDS):

Recent studies have demonstrated that detailed monitoring of gravitational microlensing events can reveal the presence of planets orbiting the microlensed source stars. With the potential of probing planets in the Galactic bulge and Magellanic Clouds, such detections greatly increase the volume over which planets can be found. This paper expands on the original studies by considering the effect of planetary phase on the form of the resultant microlensing light curve. It is found that crescent-like sources can undergo substantially more magnification than a uniformly illuminated disc, the model typically employed in studying such planets. In fact, such a circularly symmetric model is found to suffer a minimal degree of magnification when compared with the crescent models. The degree of magnification is also a strong function of the planet's orientation with respect to the microlensing caustic. The form of the magnification variability is strongly dependent on the planetary phase and from which direction the planet is swept by the caustic, providing further clues to the geometry of the planetary system. As the amount of light reflected from a planet also depends on its phase, the detection of extreme crescent-like planets requires the advent of 30-m class telescopes, while light curves of planets at more moderate phases can be determined with today's 10-m telescopes.

Abstract Copyright: The Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): gravitational lensing - planetary systems

Simbad objects: 3

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