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Gravitational Lensing: How to See the Dark J. E. Bjorkman University of Toledo Department of Physics & Astronomy
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The Dark Between the Light
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Dark Matter How do we know its there? Answer: It affects the motion of everything we can see. – Cluster Simulation Cluster Simulation – Rotation Velocities Rotation Velocities
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Galactic Rotation Curves
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Missing Mass in our Galaxy
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What is the Dark? MACHOs (Massive Compact Halo Objects) – low mass stars - "brown dwarves" – "almost" stars (planets, e.g. Jupiters) – black holes of less than solar mass – The VW graveyard WIMPs (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles) – heavy neutrinos (10 to 1000 GeV) – new particles predicted by Supersymmetry - 'neutralinos' – exotic particles – e.g. axions (particles with mass < 0.1 eV) Modified Gravity - on galactic scales.
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Where is the Dark?
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Gravity Bends Light (Einstien)
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Gravitational Lenses
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Einstein tells Eddington gravity bends starlight.
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Eclipse Astrometry How do we know the stars moved?
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Relativity Verified
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Discovery of a Gravitational Lens
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Galaxies as Lenses
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A Lensing Simulation
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A Lens Gallery
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Galaxy Clusters as Lenses
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Measuring the Dark 0.5% of Universe is luminous 99.5% of Universe is dark matter
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“Stellar Lenses” Orion behind a Black Hole
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Gravitational Microlenses What are microlenses? – Stellar mass (or smaller) lenses – Images are unresovled (milliarcsecond separation) – Lens focuses light – Object appears brighter (several magnitudes!) That’s absurd! – You’ll never see one in a million years! Answer – just look at million stars every night!
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Microlensing Searches Toward the Magellanic Clouds – MACHO (MAssive CompactHalo Objects collaboration) – EROS (Experience pour la Recherche d'Objets sombres) – DUO (Disk Unseen Objects) Toward the Galactic Bulge – OGLE (Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment) Toward M31: – AGAPE (Andromeda Galaxy Amplified Pixel Experiment) – MEGA
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Ogling the Stars
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AGAPE at M31
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Looking Through a Lens
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A Lens in Motion
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What You Really See
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Looking for Lenses in Haystacks
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Frequency of Events
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How Big is the Lens? How Close did it get?
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What are They?
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Follow-Up Monitoring PLANET (Probing Lensing Anomalies NETwork) Garching Spectroscopic Monitoring Group GMAN (Global Microlensing Alert Network) MPS (Microlensing Planet Search Project) MOA (Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics)
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Looking Through Bifocals Binary Stars as Lenses
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Binary Stars as Lenses
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Looking for Planets
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The Planet Search
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Micolensing Results They Exist! Future surveys will detect 1/day Fewer than expected toward LMC/SMC – 50% of halo may be Machos (M = 0.5Msun) More than expected toward Galactic center – Masses are few 0.1 Msun – May indicate presence of bar (i.e., Milky Way is a barred spiral) About 10% are binary events Planets – No definite detections, yet – Fewer that 1/3 of lenses have Jupiter-mass planets at 1-4 AU
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