Astrophysical Applications of Gravitational Microlensing
Shude Mao

TL;DR
Gravitational microlensing has evolved into a versatile astrophysical tool, providing insights into dark matter, exoplanets, stellar masses, and galactic structure, with promising future prospects from advanced surveys.
Contribution
This review synthesizes theoretical foundations and recent scientific highlights of microlensing, emphasizing its diverse applications and future potential in astrophysics.
Findings
Dark matter is non-baryonic, ruling out MACHOs as dominant.
Discovered ~20 exoplanets, including unique cold Neptunes.
Measured limb-darkening profiles, challenging stellar models.
Abstract
Since the first discovery of microlensing events nearly two decades ago, gravitational microlensing has accumulated tens of TBytes of data and developed into a powerful astrophysical technique with diverse applications. The review starts with a theoretical overview of the field and then proceeds to discuss the scientific highlights. (1) Microlensing observations toward the Magellanic Clouds rule out the Milky Way halo being dominated by MAssive Compact Halo Objects (MACHOs). This confirms most dark matter is non-baryonic, consistent with other observations. (2) Microlensing has discovered about 20 extrasolar planets (16 published), including the first two Jupiter-Saturn like systems and the only "cold Neptunes" yet detected. They probe a different part of the parameter space and will likely provide the most stringent test of core accretion theory of planet formation. (3) Microlensing…
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