For the last decade, the gravitational lensing in the strong gravitational
field has been studied eagerly. It is well known that, for the lensing by a
black hole, infinite number of Einstein rings are formed by the light rays
which wind around the black hole nearly on the photon sphere, which are called
relativistic Einstein rings. This is also the case for the lensing by a
wormhole. In this paper, we study the Einstein ring and relativistic Einstein
rings for the Schwarzschild black hole and the Ellis wormhole, the latter of
which is an example of traversable wormholes of the Morris-Thorne class. Given
the configuration of the gravitational lensing and the radii of the Einstein
ring and relativistic Einstein rings, we can distinguish between a black hole
and a wormhole in principle. We conclude that we can detect the relativistic
Einstein rings by wormholes which have the radii of the throat a≃0.5pc
at a galactic center with the distance 10Mpc and which have a≃10AU in
our galaxy using by the most powerful modern instruments which have the
resolution of 10−2arcsecond such as a 10-meter optical-infrared telescope.
The black holes which make the Einstein rings of the same size as the ones by
the wormholes are galactic supermassive black holes and the relativistic
Einstein rings by the black holes are too small to measure at this moment. We
may test some hypotheses of astrophysical wormholes by using the Einstein ring
and relativistic Einstein rings in the future.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, minor changes from v