When NASA's Hubble Space Telescopesnapped a picture of an elliptical galaxy,Exploring The Jungle Between My Wife’s Crotch it caught something else in the frame: A bright, red arc of light wrapped around it.
That glowing curve isn't the sign of a broken telescope, but in fact another galaxy — about 19.5 billion light-yearsfrom Earth in space. It's much farther than the elliptical galaxy, seen as the central dot in the image at the top of this story, roughly 2.7 billion light-years away.
The strange, bent shape of the extremely remote galaxy, called HerS 020941.1+001557, is caused by a quirk of nature called "gravitational lensing," something predicted in Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity over a century ago. But the gravitational lensing here displays a special type of phenomenon, known as an Einstein ring.
Gravitational lensinghappens when a celestial object has such a massive gravitational pull that it warps the time and space around it. NASA often uses the analogy of a bowling ball placed on a foam mattress or trampoline to illustrate how the fabric of spacetime bends. Light that would otherwise travel straight curves and gets distorted as it passes through the warped spacetime.
In this scene, the nearer galaxy SDSS J020941.27+001558.4, is acting like a colossal magnifying glass in the sky. This allows scientists to see the even more distant galaxy, making it appear brighter.
But gravitational lenses are known to play tricks on the eyes: They have the power to even replicate objects, the way a funhouse mirror can create multiple irregular images.
Astronomers are now adept at spotting the telltale effects of gravitational lensing, but that wasn't always the case. Four decades ago, the concentric arcs of light and stretched celestial objects could be downright confusing.
In 1987, an enormous blue arc, thought to be hundreds of trillions of miles long, was first considered one of the largest objects ever detected in space. The arc was discovered near the galaxy cluster Abell 370, with another similar object near galaxy cluster 2242-02.
Later that year, scientists at Stanford University and the National Optical Astronomy Observatory in Arizona sorted out that they were, in fact, optical illusions, distorted by Abell 370. The New York Times published a story about the "bizarre" implicationof Einstein's theory, titled "Vast Cosmic Object Downgraded to a Mirage."
Einstein rings happen when a lensed object lines up with its magnifying object. Depending on how precisely they align, an Einstein ring can either look like a full or partial circle around the object in the foreground.
This particular Einstein ring was discovered by a citizen scientist, someone who volunteered time to help review images, through SPACE WARPS. The project relies on crowdsourcing to search for gravitational lenses in space images.
Gravitational lenses have become a handy tool for studying galaxies otherwise too faint or distant to detect, extending the range of telescopes. Because light from this distant source takes time to reach Hubble, astronomers are seeing HerS 020941.1+001557 as it was about 11 billion years ago, long before the universe gave birth to the sun and Earth.
And — surprise — there's actually a third galaxy photo-bombing this picture. It's called SDSS J020941.23+001600.7, and it appears to be intersecting part of that red curve.
We Are Made of Memories: A Conversation with Mia Couto by Scott EspositoBull City Summer by Adam SobseyBusiness as Usual by Sadie SteinParis Review – William Wordsworth’s “Resolution and Independence”, Casey N. CepThese Quizzes Are Hard, and Other News by Sadie SteinRed and Blue by Anna WienerMoist, and Other News by Sadie SteinAnne Brontë Gets a Headstone, and Other News by Sadie SteinParis Was Yesterday by Sadie SteinThe Funnies, Part 3 by Tom GauldJimmy Ernst, Untitled, 1976 by The Paris ReviewWhat We’re Loving: Smells, Films, and Flames by The Paris ReviewThe Funnies, Part 3 by Tom GauldWhat We’re Loving: Works That Work by The Paris ReviewNotes from a Bookshop: April, or Spring Fever by Kelly McMastersA Bigger, Brighter Screen by Lorin SteinOn the Anniversary of Lord Byron’s Death by Clare FentressA Bigger, Brighter Screen by Lorin SteinClose Reading, and Other News by Sadie SteinMaster Class by Katherine Hill 'Theater Camp' review: A great comedy by theater kids, for theater kids Stevie Nicks Writes GoT Fan Poetry, and Other News by Sadie Stein No One? How Does No One Work for You? by Sadie Stein James Franco Is Garbo, a Novelist, and Other News by Sadie Stein Depths by Geoff Bendeck How to support those impacted by the writers' and SAG strikes Recapping Dante: Canto 2 by Alexander Aciman Future Tense: An Interview with Kiese Laymon by Whitney Mallett Clairvoyance by Sadie Stein Google Bard and ChatGPT both generate malicious code upon request, report finds What We’re Loving: Mysteries, Horror, Geography by The Paris Review Robyn Creswell Wins Shattuck Award by Sadie Stein Burger King had a really bad tweet for International Women's Day Logan Paul, now an intellectual, says he's done with Hollywood Here's how the SAG/WGA strike could affect content creators How to use PayPal on Amazon Sex and Sensibility by Diane Mehta What is pelvic pain and what can you do to treat it? Does God Ever Speak Through Cats? by Sadie Stein What to know about the third round of economic impact payments
2.6332s , 10137.515625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Exploring The Jungle Between My Wife’s Crotch】,Charm Information Network