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Month Day,2003

Using Gravity To Probe Distant Star

Sky & Telescope

An international team of astronomers have studied the atmosphere of a star 25,000 light-years away. This feat was accomplished thanks in large part to two smaller stars that happened to be in the way.

For several years, teams of astronomers have monitored fields of stars looking for gradual brightenings. The sought magnitude changes aren't due to any variable nature in the stars themselves, but because of gravitational lensing. When a massive, but dim, object crosses our line of sight to a background star, the gravity of the intervening star distorts the light from the more-distant object. The effect is a focusing of the starlight. The cycle of brightening and dimming of this so-called microlensing can last several weeks. Astronomers hope that such microlensing searches will help estimate the amount of dark matter in the galaxy by finding evidence for dwarf stars and other bodies we can't detect through other means.

On May 5, 2000, astronomers of the EROS program found a microlensing candidate and soon other observing programs were monitoring the event, designated EROS-BLG-2000-5. After about a month, the star brightened significantly, indicating that the event was in fact a pair of dwarf stars passing in front of a red giant in the central bulge of the Milky Way. Furthermore, researchers predicted that the star would have another brightening a few weeks later. Astronomers at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope geared up for the event, and when the star did indeed brighten again, they took spectra throughout several nights in early July 2000. The lensing effect enhanced emission from different parts of the giant star as the foreground dwarfs moved across the disk, in effect peering into the structure of the star. The ESO astronomers traced changes in hydrogen emission from different atmospheric depths, which were consistent with stellar models.


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