Table-top Analogues Using Chemical Waves: Gravitational Lensing Effect
ORAL
Abstract
Gravitational lensing is an astrophysical phenomenon that occurs when a massive object deviates the path of light travelling from a distant source - as the waves follow the geodesics of the space-time manifold. This effect can cause an observer to see two virtual images of the source. We built a simple table-top analogue of this astronomical effect using propagating chemical reaction-diffusion waves (as an analogue for the light rays) and spatial anomalies, which closely approximate the Schwarzschild metric of a gravity well. We show how this simple system can be used to visualize the creation of virtual suns, when light passes through a strong gravitation field around a massive object on its way to the observer on Earth.
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Presenters
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Niklas Manz
College of Wooster
Authors
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Niklas Manz
College of Wooster
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Kiyomi Sanders
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa