Gravitational lensing is when light from a faraway object bends around something big and heavy, like a giant magnifying glass in space.
Imagine you're looking at a toy car on the other side of a big ball. If you roll the ball toward you, it blocks your view of the car, but if you look around the ball, the light from the car still comes to you, just in a slightly different direction. That’s what happens with gravitational lensing, except instead of a toy car and a ball, we have stars or galaxies and something really massive, like another galaxy or a black hole.
How It Works
Light travels straight, but when it passes by a huge object, the gravity from that object pulls the light a little bit. It's like the light is taking a detour around the heavy object, just like you might walk around a big ball to see the toy car better.
Sometimes this makes the faraway object look bigger, brighter, or even split into multiple images. Scientists use this trick to study things that are very far away, like distant galaxies or even dark matter, stuff we can't see directly, but we can feel through its gravity.
Examples
- A massive object like a galaxy bends the light from a more distant object, creating multiple images of it.
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See also
- How does gravity bend light and warp spacetime?
- How does gravity actually influence objects and light in space?
- What Happens If You Fall Into a Black Hole?
- What Happens to Light When It Falls into a Black Hole?
- What Happens to Light When It Escapes a Black Hole?