by Chris Peterson » Tue Apr 11, 2017 3:41 pm
Anthony wrote:I was wonder if someone could explain why the MWB light is not affected by gravity lensing. I would expect a condensed ring of microwave Radiation around the Cluster.
I think there are a couple of factors involved. First, look at the optical lensing that is apparent. What we have is one (or maybe more) bright, nearly point source background objects being lensed around the cluster. In the case of the CMB, we have only a diffuse background that is almost perfectly uniform. So any lensing is going to be extremely low contrast. Combine this with the much lower resolution of the CMB background measurement, both spatially and in terms of intensity, and I think that answers your question. (Note the fine optical resolution, at near the pixel scale of the image, compared with the huge blobs of CMB with only a little variation in intensity.)
[quote="Anthony"]I was wonder if someone could explain why the MWB light is not affected by gravity lensing. I would expect a condensed ring of microwave Radiation around the Cluster.[/quote]
I think there are a couple of factors involved. First, look at the optical lensing that is apparent. What we have is one (or maybe more) bright, nearly point source background objects being lensed around the cluster. In the case of the CMB, we have only a diffuse background that is almost perfectly uniform. So any lensing is going to be extremely low contrast. Combine this with the much lower resolution of the CMB background measurement, both spatially and in terms of intensity, and I think that answers your question. (Note the fine optical resolution, at near the pixel scale of the image, compared with the huge blobs of CMB with only a little variation in intensity.)