Microlensing and Galactic Structure
Abstract
Because we know little about the Galactic force-field away from the plane, the Galactic mass distribution is very ill-determined. I show that a microlensing survey of galaxies closer than 50 Mpc would enable us to map in three dimensions the Galactic density of stellar mass, which should be strictly less than the total mass density. A lower limit can be placed on the stellar mass needed at R<R_0 to generate the measured optical depth towards sources in the bulge. If the Galaxy is barred, this limit is lower by a factor of up to two than in the axisymmetric case. Even our limited knowledge of the Galactic force field suffices to rule out the presence of the amount of mass an axisymmetric Galaxy needs to generate the measured optical depth. Several lines of argument imply that the Galaxy is strongly barred only at R < 4 kpc, and if this is the case, even barred Galaxy models cannot generate the measured optical depth without violating some constraint on the Galactic force-field. Galactic mass models that are based on the assumption that light traces mass, for which there is significant support in the inner Galaxy, yield microlensing optical depths that are smaller than the measured value by a factor of more than 2.5.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.astro-ph/0004362,
title = {Microlensing and Galactic Structure},
author = {James Binney},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/0004362},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
12 pages to appear in Microlensing 2000, A New Era of Microlensing Astrophysics J.W. Menzies and P.D. Sackett, eds