A funky effect Einstein predicted, known as gravitational lensing — when a foreground galaxy magnifies more distant galaxies behind it — will soon become common when NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope begins science operations in 2027 and produces vast surveys of the cosmos.
This image shows a simulated observation from NASA’s
Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope with an overlay of its Wide Field
Instrument’s field of view. More than 20 gravitational lenses, with examples
shown at left and right, are expected to pop out in every one of Roman’s vast
observations. A journal paper led by Bryce Wedig, a graduate student at
Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, estimates that of those Roman
detects, about 500 from the telescope’s High-Latitude Wide-Area Survey will be
suitable for dark matter studies. By examining such a large population of
gravitational lenses, the researchers hope to learn a lot more about the
mysterious nature of dark matter.
Credit: NASA, Bryce Wedig (Washington University),
Tansu Daylan (Washington University), Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
A particular subset of gravitational lenses, known as strong lenses, is the
focus of a new paper published in the Astrophysical Journal led by Bryce Wedig, a graduate
student at Washington University in St. Louis. The research team has
calculated that over 160,000 gravitational lenses, including hundreds suitable
for this study, are expected to pop up in Roman’s vast images. Each Roman image
will be 200 times larger than infrared snapshots from NASA’s Hubble Space
Telescope, and its upcoming “wealth” of lenses will vastly outpace the hundreds
studied by Hubble to date.
Roman will conduct three core surveys, providing expansive views of the universe. This
science team’s work is based on a previous version of Roman’s now fully
defined High-Latitude Wide-Area Survey. The researchers are working on a follow-up paper
that will align with the final survey’s specifications to fully support the
research community.
“The current sample size of these
objects from other telescopes is fairly small because we’re relying on two
galaxies to be lined up nearly perfectly along our line of sight,” Wedig said.
“Other telescopes are either limited to a smaller field of view or less precise
observations, making gravitational lenses harder to detect.”
Gravitational lenses are made up of
at least two cosmic objects. In some cases, a single foreground galaxy has
enough mass to act like a lens, magnifying a galaxy that is almost perfectly
behind it. Light from the background galaxy curves around the foreground galaxy
along more than one path, appearing in observations as warped arcs and
crescents. Of the 160,000 lensed galaxies Roman may identify, the team expects
to narrow that down to about 500 that are suitable for studying the structure
of dark matter at scales smaller than those galaxies.
“Roman will not only significantly
increase our sample size — its sharp, high-resolution images will also allow us
to discover gravitational lenses that appear smaller on the sky,” said Tansu
Daylan, the principal investigator of the science team conducting this
research program. Daylan is an assistant professor and a faculty fellow
at the McDonnell
Center for the Space Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis.
“Ultimately, both the alignment and the brightness of the background galaxies
need to meet a certain threshold so we can characterize the dark matter within
the foreground galaxies.”
This video shows how a background galaxy’s light is
lensed or magnified by a massive foreground galaxy, seen at center, before
reaching NASA’s Roman Space Telescope. Light from the background galaxy is
distorted, curving around the foreground galaxy and appearing more than once as
warped arcs and crescents. Researchers studying these objects, known as
gravitational lenses, can better characterize the mass of the foreground
galaxy, which offers clues about the particle nature of dark matter.
Credit: NASA, Joseph Olmsted (STScI)
What Is Dark Matter?
Not all mass in galaxies is made up
of objects we can see, like star clusters. A significant fraction of a galaxy’s
mass is made up of dark matter, so called because it doesn’t emit, reflect, or absorb light. Dark matter
does, however, possess mass, and like anything else with mass, it can cause
gravitational lensing.
When the gravity of a foreground
galaxy bends the path of a background galaxy’s light, its light is routed onto
multiple paths. “This effect produces multiple images of the background galaxy
that are magnified and distorted differently,” Daylan said. These “duplicates”
are a huge advantage for researchers — they allow multiple measurements of the
lensing galaxy’s mass distribution, ensuring that the resulting measurement is
far more precise.
Roman’s 300-megapixel camera, known
as its Wide Field Instrument, will allow researchers to accurately determine the
bending of the background galaxies’ light by as little as 50 milliarcseconds,
which is like measuring the diameter of a human hair from the distance of more
than two and a half American football fields or soccer pitches.
The amount of gravitational lensing
that the background light experiences depends on the intervening mass. Less
massive clumps of dark matter cause smaller distortions. As a result, if
researchers are able to measure tinier amounts of bending, they can detect and
characterize smaller, less massive dark matter structures — the types of
structures that gradually merged over time to build up the galaxies we see
today.
With Roman, the team will
accumulate overwhelming statistics about the size and structures of early
galaxies. “Finding gravitational lenses and being able to detect clumps of dark
matter in them is a game of tiny odds. With Roman, we can cast a wide net and
expect to get lucky often,” Wedig said. “We won’t see dark matter in the images
— it’s invisible — but we can measure its effects.”
“Ultimately, the question we’re
trying to address is: What particle or particles constitute dark matter?”
Daylan added. “While some properties of dark matter are known, we essentially
have no idea what makes up dark matter. Roman will help us to distinguish how
dark matter is distributed on small scales and, hence, its particle nature.”
Preparations
Continue
Before Roman launches, the team
will also search for more candidates in observations from ESA’s (the European
Space Agency’s) Euclid mission and the upcoming ground-based Vera C. Rubin
Observatory in Chile, which will begin its full-scale operations in a few
weeks. Once Roman’s infrared images are in hand, the researchers will combine
them with complementary visible light images from Euclid, Rubin, and Hubble to
maximize what’s known about these galaxies.
“We will push the limits of what we
can observe, and use every gravitational lens we detect with Roman to pin down
the particle nature of dark matter,” Daylan said.
The Nancy Grace Roman Space
Telescope is managed at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland, with participation by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California; Caltech/IPAC in Pasadena, California; the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore; and a science team comprising scientists from various
research institutions. The primary industrial partners are BAE Systems, Inc. in
Boulder, Colorado; L3Harris Technologies in Melbourne, Florida; and Teledyne
Scientific & Imaging in Thousand Oaks, California.
By Claire Blome
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.
Source: NASA’s Roman to Peer Into Cosmic ‘Lenses’ to Better Define Dark Matter - NASA
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