Gravitational lens: Difference between revisions

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imported>Jori Liesenborgs
(Started the history section (Newtonian result))
imported>Jori Liesenborgs
(Added Einstein's bending angle)
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In this equation, ''G'' is the gravitational constant, ''M'' the mass of the object deflecting the light, ''c'' is
In this equation, ''G'' is the gravitational constant, ''M'' the mass of the object deflecting the light, ''c'' is
the speed of light and ''d'' is the impact parameter of the light ray.
the speed of light and ''d'' is the impact parameter of the light ray.
More than a century later, after having completed his [[general theory of relativity]], [[Albert Einstein]] published a new expression, differing only by a factor of two from the Newtonian result:
<math>\hat\alpha = \frac{4 G M}{c^2 d}</math>


== Regimes ==
== Regimes ==

Revision as of 05:44, 24 February 2007

Gravitational deflection of light

In a gravitational lensing scenario, light traveling from a distant astronomical source (e.g. a galaxy) to an observer is deflected by the gravitational field of an intermediate object (e.g. a cluster of galaxies), therefore designated the gravitational lens. Because of this, the observer will see the source in a direction different from the one in which the source would be observed if the gravitational lens were absent. Furthermore, it is possible for light rays to reach the observer by multiple paths, causing multiple images of the same source to appear.

History

Deflection angle

In Newtonian mechanics, the path of a test particle in a gravitational field does not depend on the mass of the test particle. For this reason, one can argue that even in the absolute space and time of Newton, light does not always go in a straight line, but can be deflected noticably by objects with a sufficiently strong gravitational field. In 1804, J. von Soldner was the first one to publish the Newtonian value of the deflection angle:

In this equation, G is the gravitational constant, M the mass of the object deflecting the light, c is the speed of light and d is the impact parameter of the light ray.

More than a century later, after having completed his general theory of relativity, Albert Einstein published a new expression, differing only by a factor of two from the Newtonian result:

Regimes

Strong lensing

Weak lensing

Microlensing

The thin lens approximation

Applications