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The phenomenon at the root of gravitational lensing is the
deflection of light by gravitational fields predicted by Einstein's
general relativity, in the weak-field limit. The deflection has
well-known observable effects, such as multiple images, magnification
of images, and time delays for propagation of light along the paths
forming different images. Because the effect is independent of
wavelength, multiple lensed images share a single spectrum, which
helps us to identify lensed images.
We currently distinguish three regimes: strong (or macro) lensing,
weak lensing and microlensing. In strong lensing, the light from a
distant source such as a quasar or galaxy is deflected by an
intervening galaxy or cluster of galaxies, forming multiple images of
the source. In weak lensing, the light from a distant source is
distorted but not multiply imaged. The strength and spatial
distribution of the effect are determined by measuring many distorted
images and deriving a statistical measure of the lensing. In
microlensing, the light from a distant source is already macro-lensed,
but components such as stars in the lens add their own
deflections. The effect appears as additional, measurable
magnification.
A few examples of the application of gravitational
lenses are: estimates of the amount of dark matter in galaxies and
clusters of galaxies, measurements of the evolution of galaxies with
cosmic time, the age of the universe and estimates of constraints on
dark energy. Because the physics of gravitational lensing is
well-established, these estimates are robust and provide unique
constraints, complementary to those from other astrophysical techniques.
Project Links
CASTLES CfA-Arizona Space Telescope Lens Survey
SLACS Sloan Lens ACS Survey
People
Emilio Falco,
Adam Bolton,
Brian McLeod
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