The Einstein ring, formed as light from a distant galaxy bends to glow around another object in the foreground, could help solve the universe’s mysteries.
The Euclid space telescope has captured an Einstein ring, a rare and spectacular phenomenon, around the galaxy NGC 6505. This unprecedented observation opens new perspectives for studying dark ...
Euclid space telescope sent some images back to Earth during an early testing phase. While reviewing the pictures, astronomer ...
Einstein predicted the existence of gravitationally-warped rings of light in 1915. Now, a new one has been discovered just a ...
The rarely observed rings are named for mathematician and physicist Albert Einstein ... have made an in-depth study of the Euclid images showcasing details of the Einstein ring, published Monday ...
They are one of the best examples we have of gravitational lensing–a phenomenon that Albert Einstein predicted in 1915. The ring and other findings are detailed in a study published February 10 ...
Euclid’s jaw-dropping capture of the closest Einstein ring ever seen reveals the hidden forces shaping our universe — and ...
Einstein rings help scientists study dark matter and cosmic expansion. Euclid will find thousands more lenses to map the ...
The Einstein ring was found surrounding the galaxy NGC 6505, located a relatively close 590 million light-years from Earth.
Galactic lenses like this one, which is the closest astronomers have ever found, were predicted by Albert Einstein in 1936 ... makes it easier to see the four images of the faraway galaxy.