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Real-time Detection of Gravitational Microlensing
Preprint

Real-time Detection of Gravitational Microlensing

Abstract

Real-time detection of microlensing has moved from proof of concept in 1994 to a steady stream of events this year. Global dissemination of these events by the MACHO and OGLE collaborations has made possible intensive photometric and spectroscopic followup from widely dispersed sites confirming the microlensing hypothesis. Improved photometry and increased temporal resolution from followup observations greatly increases the possibility of detecting deviations from the standard point-source, point-lens, inertial motion microlensing model. These deviations are crucial in understanding individual lensing systems by breaking the degeneracy between lens mass, position and velocity. We report here on GMAN (Global Microlensing Alert Network), the coordinated followup of MACHO alerts.

Authors

Pratt MR; Alcock C; Allsman RA; Alves D; Axelrod TS; Becker A; Bennett DP; Cook KH; Freeman KC; Griest K

Publication date

August 8, 1995

DOI

10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/9508039

Preprint server

arXiv
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