Astronomers have combined two powerful astronomical assets, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, to identify 19 new "gravitationally lensed" galaxies, adding significantly to the approximately 100 gravitational lenses previously known. Among these 19, they have found eight new so-called "Einstein rings," which are perhaps the most elegant manifestation of the lensing phenomenon. Gravitational lensing occurs when the gravitational field from a massive object warps space and deflects light from a distant object behind it. Einstein rings are produced when two galaxies are almost perfectly aligned, one behind the other.
Expand (862kb, 3000 x 2400) Each image is 8 arcseconds wide. Credit: NASA, ESA, and the SLACS Survey team: A. Bolton (Harvard/ Smithsonian), S. Burles (MIT), L. Koopmans (Kapteyn), T. Treu (UCSB), and L. Moustakas (JPL/Caltech)
The thin blue bull's-eye patterns in these eight Hubble Space Telescope images appear like neon signs floating over reddish-white blobs. The blobs are giant elliptical galaxies roughly 2 to 4 billion light-years away. The bull's-eye patterns are Einstein rings, which are created as the light from galaxies twice as far away is distorted into circular shapes by the gravity of the giant elliptical galaxies.
Astronomers have spotted the most distant Einstein ring ever seen. It gives an insight into both the gravitational lensing galaxy and the more distant magnified galaxy. Gravitational lensing occurs because massive objects - ranging from stars to entire galaxies - distort the fabric of space-time, bending the path of light passing near them. A strong gravitational lens can form multiple images of the distant object, or spread its light into an arc.
It shows about 180° of the ring. But Cabanac estimates the ring actually spans about 270°, and he expects to confirm that during planned observations with the Hubble Space Telescope.
Other teams have recorded more complete rings at radio and infrared wavelengths. However, the real importance to astronomers in this case is that both the lens and the distant background galaxy are very far away, so we see them as they were when the universe was very young.
The background galaxy in this case is 12 billion light years away, revealing a time just 1.7 billion years after the big bang. Normally, too faint for astronomers to record detailed spectra. At seven billion light years away, the gravitational lens is not quite far enough away to set a record. But it still offers important data, because its focusing power depends on its mass, which can be calculated by analysing the ring pattern, while other techniques can only estimate mass indirectly.