The Origin of the Microlensing Events Observed Towards the LMC and the Stellar Counterpart of the Magellanic Stream
Gurtina Besla (Columbia), Lars Hernquist (CfA), Abraham Loeb (CfA)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new model explaining microlensing events towards the LMC as caused by tidally stripped stars from the SMC, supporting a recent interaction history of the Magellanic Clouds and predicting observable stellar counterparts.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theoretical model linking SMC stellar debris to microlensing events, challenging previous self-lensing explanations and suggesting new observational tests.
Findings
Tidally stripped SMC stars can explain observed microlensing durations and distributions.
Differences in survey event rates are due to detection efficiencies.
A stellar counterpart to the Magellanic Stream and Bridge is predicted.
Abstract
We introduce a novel theoretical model to explain the long-standing puzzle of the nature of the microlensing events reported towards the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) by the MACHO and OGLE collaborations. We propose that a population of tidally stripped stars from the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) located ~4-10 kpc behind a lensing population of LMC disk stars can naturally explain the observed event durations (17-71 days), event frequencies and spatial distribution of the reported events. Differences in the event frequencies reported by the OGLE (~0.33 /yr) and MACHO (~1.75 /yr) surveys appear to be naturally accounted for by their different detection efficiencies and sensitivity to faint sources. The presented models of the Magellanic System were constructed without prior consideration of the microlensing implications. These results favor a scenario for the interaction history of the…
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