Recently, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Euclid space telescope has discovered a rare Einstein ring surrounding the galaxy NGC 6505, located about 590 million light-years from Earth.
Photos taken by Euclid in September 2023, but released recently, show the Einstein ring with a bright central ball of light surrounded by a luminous, cloudy ring.
About the Ring
Einstein rings are named after physicist and mathematician Albert Einstein, whose general theory of relativity predicted that light could bend and intensify around objects in the universe.
An Einstein ring is a ring of light around a form of dark matter, galaxy or cluster of galaxies, it is essentially an example of gravitational lensing.
Gravitational lensing occurs when a massive celestial body such as a galaxy cluster causes a sufficient curvature of spacetime for the path of light around it to be visibly bent.
The body causing the light to curve is accordingly called a gravitational lens.
In the case of the newly discovered Einstein ring, NGC 6505 acted as the gravitational lens, distorting and amplifying light from a distant galaxy 4.42 billion light-years away. A light-year equals 9.46 trillion kilometers.
The first Einstein ring was discovered in 1987, and while several more have been found, their total number remains unknown. They are extremely rare, with less than 1% of galaxies having one.
Einstein rings are not visible to the naked eye, and can be observed only through space telescopes such as Euclid.
Scientific Importance
These rings assist scientists in studying dark matter, which, although undetected, is thought to constitute 85% of the universe’s total matter.
Dark matter doesn’t interact with light but has a gravitational effect, making gravitational lensing sensitive to its presence and allowing indirect detection.
They can also provide information about the expansion of the universe as the space between the Earth and other galaxies.