Goddard Glossary: Gravitational Lensing
Narration: Katy Mersmann
Transcript:
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Gravitational lensing.
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Look at the Webb telescope's
first deep field image and you may notice
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some galaxies that are stretched
or banana shaped.
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They're not actually shaped like this.
So what makes them look like it?
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Gravitational lensing.
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Gravitational lensing occurs
when a celestial object has such a massive
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gravitational pull that it actually warps
the time and space around it.
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Imagine placing a ball
on a piece of squishy foam.
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The fabric of space --
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the foam -- sinks down
around the celestial object -- the ball.
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And light that would otherwise travel
in a straight line
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follows the bend of the warped space,
distorting and brightening light
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from behind the celestial object
-- a galaxy cluster in this case.
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So why do we care?
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Well, because with a natural
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magnifying glass,
we can see even more distant objects.
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In Webb's first deep field here,
the banana shaped
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galaxies are actually much farther away
than the galaxies in the central cluster.
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We see them as stretched
because their light is being warped
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and magnified by the galaxy clusters
in front of them.
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And this lets us see much farther than we
would otherwise be able to.