Already in his book
The Queries (query number 1), expanded from 1704 to 1718,
Isaac Newton wondered if a light ray could be deflected by gravity. In 1801,
Johann Georg von Soldner calculated the amount of deflection of a light ray from a star under Newtonian gravity. In 1915
Albert Einstein correctly predicted the amount of deflection under
General Relativity, which was twice the amount predicted by von Soldner. Einstein's prediction was validated by a 1919 expedition led by
Arthur Eddington, which was a great early success for General Relativity. In 1924
Orest Chwolson found that lensing could produce multiple images of the star. A correct prediction of the concomitant brightening of the source, the basis for microlensing, was published in 1936 by Einstein. Because of the unlikely alignment required, he concluded that "there is no great chance of observing this phenomenon". Gravitational lensing's modern theoretical framework was established with works by Yu Klimov (1963), Sidney Liebes (1964), and
Sjur Refsdal (1964).
Peter J. Young then appreciated that the analysis needed to be extended to allow for the simultaneous effect of many stars.
Bohdan Paczyński first used the term "microlensing" to describe this phenomenon. This type of microlensing is difficult to identify because of the intrinsic variability of quasars, but in 1989 Mike Irwin et al. published detection of microlensing of one of the four images in the "
Einstein Cross" quasar in
Huchra's Lens. In 1986, Paczyński proposed using microlensing to look for
dark matter in the form of massive compact halo objects (
MACHOs) in the
Galactic halo, by observing background stars in a nearby galaxy. Two groups of particle physicists working on dark matter heard his talks and joined with astronomers to form the Anglo-Australian MACHO collaboration and the French EROS collaboration. In 1986,
Robert J. Nemiroff predicted the likelihood of microlensing and calculated basic microlensing induced light curves for several possible lens-source configurations in his 1987 thesis. In 1991 Mao and Paczyński suggested that microlensing might be used to find binary companions to stars, and in 1992 Gould and Loeb demonstrated that microlensing can be used to detect exoplanets. In 1992, Paczyński founded the
Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment, which began searching for events in the direction of the
Galactic bulge. The first two microlensing events in the direction of the
Large Magellanic Cloud that might be caused by dark matter were reported in back to back
Nature papers by MACHO and EROS in 1993, and in the following years, events continued to be detected. The first two events detected by EROS group later turned out to have different origin than microlensing. EROS subsequently published even stronger upper limits on MACHOs, and it is currently uncertain as to whether there is any halo microlensing excess that could be due to dark matter at all. The SuperMACHO project currently underway seeks to locate the lenses responsible for MACHO's results. Despite not solving the dark matter problem, microlensing has been shown to be a useful tool for many applications. Hundreds of microlensing events are detected per year toward the
Galactic bulge, where the microlensing optical depth (due to stars in the Galactic disk) is about 20 times greater than through the Galactic halo. In 2007, the OGLE project identified 611 event candidates, and the MOA project (a Japan-New Zealand collaboration) identified 488 (although not all candidates turn out to be microlensing events, and there is a significant overlap between the two projects). In addition to these surveys, follow-up projects are underway to study in detail potentially interesting events in progress, primarily with the aim of detecting extrasolar planets. These include MiNDSTEp, RoboNet, MicroFUN and PLANET. In September 2020, astronomers using microlensing techniques reported the
detection, for the first time, of an
earth-mass rogue planet unbounded by any star, and free floating in the
Milky Way galaxy. Microlensing not only magnifies the source but also moves its apparent position. The duration of this is longer than that of the magnification, and can be used to find the mass of the lens. In 2022 it was reported that this technique was used to make the first unambiguous detection of an isolated stellar-mass
black hole, using observations by the
Hubble Space Telescope stretching over six years, starting in August 2011 shortly after the microlensing event was detected. The black hole has a mass of about 7 times the
solar mass and is about away, in
Sagittarius, while the star is about away. There are millions of isolated black holes in our galaxy, and being isolated very little radiation is emitted from their surroundings, so they can only be detected by microlensing. The authors expect that many more will be found with future instruments, specifically the
Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and the
Vera C. Rubin Observatory. ==Mathematics==