Date:
Thu, 19/03/201512:30-13:30
Location:
Kaplun building, Room No. 200
Lecturer: Dr. Yossi Shvartzvald
Affiliation: Tel Aviv University
Abstract:
The discovery of thousands of extrasolar
planets ranks among the most exciting
scientific developments of the past decade.
Among the techniques currently used to
discover extrasolar planets, microlensing has
some unique capabilities. It is the most
sensitive technique to detect planets beyond
the "snowline", where gas and ice giants are
likely to form. Over the past four years, we
have carried out a "second generation"
microlensing survey, combining OGLE, MOA,
and the Wise observatory. I will present a
statistical analysis for the first four seasons of
the survey. Over 15% of the events that were
observed by all three sites showed a deviation
from a single-lens microlensing, and for ~1/4 of
those the anomaly might be explained by a
planetary companion. By accounting for our
detection efficiency, we find a ~40% planetary
system abundance. Moreover, we find that
Neptunes-mass planets are ~4 times more
common than Jupiter-mass planets. The
companion to host-mass ratio distribution
shows a deficit at q~0.01, dividing the
distribution into two populations, analogous to
the binary and planet populations that are
divided by the ``brown dwarf desert'' seen in
radial-velocity surveys.
Additional details of the upcoming Astrophysics'
seminars can be found on the following link.
האירוע הזה כולל שיחת וידאו ב-Google Hangouts.
הצטרף: https://hangouts.google.com/hangouts/_/mail.huji.ac.il/astrophysics?hceid=bWFpbC5odWppLmFjLmlsX2c0czhydDlpcmhwZzRvdGNybWIzZGFqcjdvQGdyb3VwLmNhbGVuZGFyLmdvb2dsZS5jb20.mtan3c0j7odjfik7tbhhkc359s&hs=121