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Multi-messenger gravitational lensing

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-06-11, 10:45 authored by Graham P Smith, Tessa Baker, Simon Birrer, Christine E Collins, Jose Maria Ezquiaga, Srashti Goyal, Otto A Hannuksela, Phurailatpam Hemanta, Martin A Hendry, Justin Janquart, David Keitel, Andrew J Levan, Rico KL Lo, Anupreeta More, Matt Nicholl, Inés Pastor-Marazuela, Andrés I Ponte Pérez, Helena Ubach, Laura E Uronen, Mick Wright, Miguel Zumalacarregui, Federica Bianco, Mesut Çalişkan, Juno CL Chan, Elena Colangeli, Benjamin P Gompertz, Christopher P Haines, Erin E Hayes, Bin Hu, Gavin P Lamb, Anna Liu, Soheb Mandhai, Harsh Narola, Quynh Lan Nguyen, Jason SC Poon, Dan Ryczanowski, Eungwang Seo, Anowar J Shajib, Xikai Shan, Nial TanvirNial Tanvir, Luka Vujeva

We introduce the rapidly emerging field of multi-messenger gravitational lensing—the discovery and science of gravitationally lensed phenomena in the distant universe through the combination of multiple messengers. This is framed by gravitational lensing phenomenology that has grown since the first discoveries in the twentieth century, messengers that span 30 orders of magnitude in energy from high-energy neutrinos to gravitational waves, and powerful ‘survey facilities’ that are capable of continually scanning the sky for transient and variable sources. Within this context, the main focus is on discoveries and science that are feasible in the next 5–10 years with current and imminent technology including the LIGO–Virgo–KAGRA network of gravitational wave detectors, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory and contemporaneous gamma/X-ray satellites and radio surveys. The scientific impact of even one multi-messenger gravitational lensing discovery will be transformational and reach across fundamental physics, cosmology and astrophysics. We describe these scientific opportunities and the key challenges along the path to achieving them. This article therefore describes the consensus that emerged at the eponymous Theo Murphy meeting in March 2024, and also serves as an introduction to this Theo Murphy meeting issue.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences

Volume

383

Issue

2295

Pagination

20240134

Publisher

The Royal Society

issn

1364-503X

eissn

1471-2962

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-06-11

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Nial Tanvir

Deposit date

2025-05-16

Data Access Statement

This article has no additional data.

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