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Astronomers are always trying to get their hands on bigger and more powerful telescopes. But the most powerful telescopes in the Universe are completely natural, and the size of a galaxy cluster. When you use the gravity of a galaxy as a lens, you can peer right back to the edges of the observable Universe.
Read the full blog entry Last edited by Fraser; 21-May-2007 at 03:21 PM. |
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Gravitational Lensing is something I've been interested in for a while so it was great listening to a Astronomy Cast episode on the topic.
I spend much of my time as an amateur astronomer taking long exposures of faint galaxy clusters, just for the fun of it, to see what I can see, see how many galaxies I can identify, see what is out there in the distant universe, etc. In one image I captured a galaxy which to my eye looks like it is lensed. I have no scientific backing to the thought at all - it just looks odd while all other galaxies in the FOV appear normal. It is curved like a banana, like it is curved around a point in space. Does anyone know if there is a catalogue of known lensed objects or the like that I could search for this galaxy? The galaxy in question is PGC 96819 and the image in question is here (click image to see larger): http://www.rogergroom.com/rogergroom...m.jsp?Item=284 Thanks, Roger. |