Microlensing search for planets
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.0721
Most exoplanets have been found by Doppler evidence of periodic stellar motion or by transits across a star’s face. Both methods are strongly biased in favor of planets with orbital radii R much smaller than 1 AU, Earth’s distance from the Sun. Microlensing, the transient brightening of a star through gravitational lensing by an intervening star or planet, is an alternative that’s most sensitive to planets several AU from their stars. As seen in the figure, the background star brightens as the lensing star crosses the line of sight. But a 6-M ⊕ (Earth-mass) planet trailing the lensing star by 3 AU produces a telltale blip in the light curve. Microlensing has as yet revealed fewer than two dozen planets. Now the PLANET