Single-epoch and Differential Astrometric Microlensing of Quasars
R. For\'es-Toribio, E. Mediavilla, J. A. Mu\~noz, J., Jim\'enez-Vicente, C. Fian, C. del Burgo

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method for measuring astrometric microlensing in lensed quasars using single-epoch observations, enabling studies of quasar structure and dark matter micro-lenses.
Contribution
It proposes a novel approach to detect centroid shifts caused by microlensing in quasars, utilizing the large emission regions as reference points for the first time.
Findings
Centroid shift decreases with increasing emission region size.
Detection of microlensing effects is feasible with upcoming instruments.
Differential microlensing can probe dark matter micro-lenses.
Abstract
We propose and discuss a new experimental approach to measure the centroid shift induced by gravitational microlensing in the images of lensed quasars (astrometric microlensing). Our strategy is based on taking the photocenter of a region in the quasar large enough as to be insensitive to microlensing as reference to measure the centroid displacement of the continuum. In this way, single-epoch measurements of astrometric microlensing can be performed. Using numerical simulations, we show that, indeed, the centroid shift monotonically decreases as the size of the emitting region increases, and only for relatively large regions, like the broad line region (BLR), does the centroid shift become negligible. This opens interesting possibilities to study the stratification of the different emitters in the accretion disk and the BLR. We estimate the amplitude of the centroid shifts for 79…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · History and Developments in Astronomy · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
