Mosaic of Gravitationally Lensed Quasars

Each of these Hubble Space Telescope snapshots reveals four distorted images of a background quasar surrounding the central core of a foreground massive galaxy.

The multiple quasar images were produced by the gravity of the foreground galaxy, which is acting like a magnifying glass by warping the quasar’s light in an effect called gravitational lensing. Quasars are extremely distant cosmic streetlights produced by active black holes.

The light rays from each lensed quasar image take a slightly different path through space to reach Earth. The pathway’s length depends on the amount of matter that is distorting space along the line of sight to the quasar. To trace each pathway, the astronomers monitor the flickering of the quasar’s light as its black hole gobbles up material. When the light flickers, each lensed image brightens at a different time. This flickering sequence allows researchers to measure the time delays between each image as the lensed light travels along its path to Earth.

These time-delay measurements helped astronomers calculate how fast the universe is growing, a value called the Hubble constant.

The Hubble images were taken between 2003 and 2004 with the Advanced Camera for Surveys.

Link:

Credit:

NASA, ESA, S.H. Suyu (Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Technical University of Munich, and Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics), and K.C. Wong (University of Tokyo’s Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe)

About the Image

NASA press release
NASA caption
Id:opo2004a
Type:Collage
Release date:13 January 2020, 10:12
Size:912 x 956 px

About the Object

Type:Early Universe : Galaxy : Activity : AGN : Quasar
Category:Cosmology

Image Formats

r.titleLarge JPEG
186.4 KB
r.titleScreensize JPEG
165.4 KB

Zoomable


Wallpapers

r.title1024x768
167.7 KB
r.title1280x1024
223.9 KB
r.title1600x1200
276.8 KB
r.title1920x1200
294.2 KB
r.title2048x1536
373.1 KB

Also see our


Privacy policy Accelerated by CDN77