selden wrote:Please remember that newspaper science articles are triviailzed in order to be partially understandable by the non-scientific reader. The description there does not rule out gravitational microlensing. That also causes a decrease in light, although it's usually followed by a slignt increase.
Maybe, but aren't the microlensing stars too dim to be studied properly (with the radial velocity method for example) like is the case with OGLE 2003-BLG-235? And can hot Jupiters be detected with the microlensing technique? And if they orbit at some greater distance from the parent star RV confirmation takes time.
I found this from the Hubble Daily Reports (February-March 2004):
NICMOS 9750
The Galactic Bulge Deep Field: A Planetary Transit Survey and Very
Deep Stellar Mass Function
We propose to observe a Galactic bulge field continuously with ACS/WFC
over a 7-day period. We will monitor ~167, 000 F, G, and K dwarfs down
to V=23, in order to detect transits by orbiting Jovian planets. If
the frequency of "hot Jupiters" is similar to that in the solar
neighborhood, we will detect over 100 planets, more than doubling the
number of extrasolar planets known. For the brighter stars with
transits, we will confirm the planetary nature of the companions
through radial- velocity measurements using the 8-m VLT. We will
determine the metallicities of most of the planet-bearing stars as
well as a control sample, through follow-up VLT spectroscopy. The
metallicities of the target stars range over more than 1.5 dex,
allowing for a determination of the dependence of planet frequency
upon metallicity--a crucial element in understanding planet formation.
We will be able to discriminate between the equally numerous disk and
bulge stars via proper motions. Hence we will determine, for the first
time, the frequencies of planets in two entirely different stellar
populations. We will also determine for the first time the
distribution of planetary radii for extrasolar planets for both these
populations. Parallel observations with NICMOS will provide ultra-deep
near-infrared images of a nearby bulge field, which will be used to
determine the stellar luminosity and mass functions down to the
brown-dwarf regime. The data will also be useful for a variety of
spinoff projects, including a census of variable stars and of hot
white dwarfs in the bulge, and the metallicity distribution of bulge
dwarfs.
selden wrote:We need to see a copy of the report written by the researchers in order to know exactly which techniques were used. So far I haven't found it.
They probably release it after the RV measurements... Well, lets hope it won't take very long

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