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POINT-AGAPE Pixel Lensing Survey of M31: Evidence for a MACHO contribution to Galactic Halos

The POINT-AGAPE collaboration is carrying out a search for gravitational microlensing toward M31 to reveal galactic dark matter in the form of MACHOs (Massive Astrophysical Compact Halo Objects) in the halos of the Milky Way and M31. A high-threshold analysis of 3 years of data yields 6 bright, shor...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Calchi Novati, Sebastiano, Paulin-Henriksson, S., An, J., Baillon, P., Belokurov, V., Carr, Bernard J., Creze, M., Evans, N.W., Giraud-Heraud, Y., Gould, A., Jetzer, Ph., Kaplan, J., Kerins, E., Hewett, Paul C., Smartt, S.J., Stalin, C.S., Tsapras, Y., Weston, M.J.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20053135
http://cds.cern.ch/record/831740
Descripción
Sumario:The POINT-AGAPE collaboration is carrying out a search for gravitational microlensing toward M31 to reveal galactic dark matter in the form of MACHOs (Massive Astrophysical Compact Halo Objects) in the halos of the Milky Way and M31. A high-threshold analysis of 3 years of data yields 6 bright, short--duration microlensing events, which are confronted to a simulation of the observations and the analysis. The observed signal is much larger than expected from self lensing alone and we conclude, at the 95% confidence level, that at least 20% of the halo mass in the direction of M31 must be in the form of MACHOs if their average mass lies in the range 0.5-1 M$_\odot$. This lower bound drops to 8% for MACHOs with masses $\sim 0.01$ M$_\odot$. In addition, we discuss a likely binary microlensing candidate with caustic crossing. Its location, some 32' away from the centre of M31, supports our conclusion that we are detecting a MACHO signal in the direction of M31.