Detectability of Orbital Motion in Stellar Binary and Planetary Microlenses
Matthew T. Penny, Shude Mao, Eamonn Kerins

TL;DR
This paper assesses how effectively orbital motion in binary and planetary microlenses can be detected through simulated high-cadence surveys, revealing specific detection efficiencies for different event types and conditions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of orbital motion detection efficiency in microlensing surveys, considering various lensing parameters and event types.
Findings
Detection efficiency for planetary caustic-crossing events: 6.1%.
Detection efficiency for planetary smooth events: 1.3%.
Detection efficiency for stellar binaries with caustic crossings: 9.8%."],
Abstract
A standard binary microlensing event lightcurve allows just two parameters of the lensing system to be measured: the mass ratio of the companion to its host, and the projected separation of the components in units of the Einstein radius. However, other exotic effects can provide more information about the lensing system. Orbital motion in the lens is one such effect, which if detected, can be used to constrain the physical properties of the lens. To determine the fraction of binary lens lightcurves affected by orbital motion (the detection efficiency) we simulate lightcurves of orbiting binary star and star-planet (planetary) lenses and simulate the continuous, high-cadence photometric monitoring that will be conducted by the next generation of microlensing surveys that are beginning to enter operation. The effect of orbital motion is measured by fitting simulated lightcurve data with…
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