1 research outputs found
Lensing and caustic effects on cosmological distances
We consider the changes which occur in cosmological distances due to the
combined effects of some null geodesics passing through low-density regions
while others pass through lensing-induced caustics. This combination of effects
increases observed areas corresponding to a given solid angle even when
averaged over large angular scales, through the additive effect of increases on
all scales, but particularly on micro-angular scales; however angular sizes
will not be significantly effected on large angular scales (when caustics
occur, area distances and angular-diameter distances no longer coincide). We
compare our results with other works on lensing, which claim there is no such
effect, and explain why the effect will indeed occur in the (realistic)
situation where caustics due to lensing are significant. Whether or not the
effect is significant for number counts depends on the associated angular
scales and on the distribution of inhomogeneities in the universe. It could
also possibly affect the spectrum of CBR anisotropies on small angular scales,
indeed caustics can induce a non-Gaussian signature into the CMB at small
scales and lead to stronger mixing of anisotropies than occurs in weak lensing.Comment: 28 pages, 6 ps figures, eps