Abstract

Deflection of light by gravity was predicted by General Relativity and observationally confirmed in 1919. In the following decades, various aspects of the gravitational lens effect were explored theoretically. Among them were: the possibility of multiple or ring-like images of background sources, the use of lensing as a gravitational telescope on very faint and distant objects, and the possibility of determining Hubble’s constant with lensing. It is only relatively recently, (after the discovery of the first doubly imaged quasar in 1979), that gravitational lensing has became an observational science. Today lensing is a booming part of astrophysics.In addition to multiply-imaged quasars, a number of other aspects of lensing have been discovered: For example, giant luminous arcs, quasar microlensing, Einstein rings, galactic microlensing events, arclets, and weak gravitational lensing. At present, literally hundreds of individual gravitational lens phenomena are known.Although still in its childhood, lensing has established itself as a very useful astrophysical tool with some remarkable successes. It has contributed significant new results in areas as different as the cosmological distance scale, the large scale matter distribution in the universe, mass and mass distribution of galaxy clusters, the physics of quasars, dark matter in galaxy halos, and galaxy structure. Looking at these successes in the recent past we predict an even more luminous future for gravitational lensing.Electronic Supplementary MaterialSupplementary material is available for this article at 10.12942/lrr-1998-12.

Highlights

  • Within the last 20 years, gravitational lensing has changed from being considered a geometric curiosity to a helpful and in some ways unique tool of modern astrophysics

  • Giant luminous arcs, quasar microlensing, Einstein rings, galactic microlensing, weak lensing, galaxy-galaxy lensing open up very different regimes for the gravitational telescope

  • What seemed to be an impossible task at the time – namely determine the brightness of millions of stars on an almost nightly basis – was turned into three big observational campaigns within few years (MACHO, EROS, OGLE experiments)

Read more

Summary

31 Aug 2001

Bibliography: corrected year of publication in reference Weinberg (1972). Minor editorial revision of reference list (reference numbers have changed), URLs updated. Page 30: Corrected value of surface mass density from κ = 0.2 to κ = 0.8

Introduction
History of Gravitational Lensing
Basics of Gravitational Lensing
Lens equation
Einstein radius
Critical surface mass density
Image positions and magnifications
Lens mapping
Time delay and “Fermat’s” theorem
Lensing Phenomena
Multiply-imaged quasars
The first lens
This can be seen very simply
Einstein rings
Giant luminous arcs and arclets
Cluster mass reconstruction
Galactic microlensing
Findings
Future Gravitational Lensing
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call