Astrometric microlensing probes of the isolated neutron star population with Roman
Zofia Kaczmarek, Abby Halasi-Kun, Peter McGill, Scott E. Perkins, William A. Dawson

TL;DR
The paper simulates and analyzes the potential of the Roman Space Telescope to detect isolated neutron stars via astrometric microlensing, providing a realistic dataset and identifying characteristic features for neutron star classification.
Contribution
It presents a detailed simulation of Roman's microlensing observations focusing on neutron stars, including their expected detection rates and characteristic features for identification.
Findings
Roman will observe approximately 11,000 microlensing events with detectable signals.
Around 100 of these events are expected to involve neutron star lenses.
Detection rate decreases by 38% without low-cadence observations.
Abstract
Notoriously hard to detect and study, isolated neutron stars (NS) could provide valuable answers to fundamental questions about stellar evolution and explosion physics. With the upcoming Roman Space Telescope, scheduled for launch in 2026, a new and powerful channel for their detection - astrometric microlensing - will become available. We set out to create a realistic sample of simulated gravitational microlensing events as observed by Roman with the Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey. We focus in particular on the population of NS lenses, which has until now been largely understudied. We use state-of-the-art Galactic models tailored for application to microlensing by compact objects. We simulate four different NS populations with Maxwellian natal kick distributions: km/s. We apply projected Roman precision, cadence, and detectability criteria. We…
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