STELLAR ROTATION EFFECTS IN POLARIMETRIC MICROLENSING

被引:3
|
作者
Sajadian, Sedighe [1 ]
机构
[1] Sharif Univ Technol, Dept Phys, POB 11155-9161, Tehran, Iran
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
gravitational lensing: micro; methods: numerical; polarization; stars: luminosity function; mass function; stars: rotation; techniques: polarimetric; LIGHT-SOURCE ANISOTROPY; FIELD M-DWARFS; SCATTERING POLARIZATION; GALACTIC BULGE; STARS; KEPLER; EVENTS; INTERFEROMETRY; EVOLUTION; ENVELOPE;
D O I
10.3847/0004-637X/825/2/152
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
It is well known that the polarization signal in microlensing events of hot stars is larger than that of main-sequence stars. Most hot stars rotate rapidly around their stellar axes. The stellar rotation creates ellipticity and gravity-darkening effects that break the spherical symmetry of the source's shape and the circular symmetry of the source's surface brightness respectively. Hence, it causes a net polarization signal for the source star. This polarization signal should be considered in polarimetric microlensing of fast rotating stars. For moderately rotating stars, lensing can magnify or even characterize small polarization signals due to the stellar rotation through polarimetric observations. The gravity-darkening effect due to a rotating source star creates asymmetric perturbations in polarimetric and photometric microlensing curves whose maximum occurs when the lens trajectory crosses the projected position of the rotation pole on the sky plane. The stellar ellipticity creates a time shift (i) in the position of the second peak of the polarimetric curves in transit microlensing events and (ii) in the peak position of the polarimetric curves with respect to the photometric peak position in bypass microlensing events. By measuring this time shift via polarimetric observations of microlensing events, we can evaluate the ellipticity of the projected source surface on the sky plane. Given the characterizations of the FOcal Reducer and low dispersion Spectrograph (FORS2) polarimeter at the Very Large Telescope, the probability of observing this time shift is very small. The more accurate polarimeters of the next generation may well measure these time shifts and evaluate the ellipticity of microlensing source stars.
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页数:12
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