Gravitational Lensing of Supernovae Sheds Light on Universe's Expansion and Dark Energy

January 19, 2026
Gravitational Lensing of Supernovae Sheds Light on Universe's Expansion and Dark Energy
  • Billions of light-years away, the SNe are magnified and split into multiple images by strong gravitational lensing from intervening galaxy clusters, with SN Ares and SN Athena creating time-delayed light paths that enable cosmological measurements.

  • Researchers suggest these events could yield the most precise, single-step measurements of cosmology, potentially revealing new physics or uncovering unknown systematics in current analyses.

  • Scientists hope the measurements will provide precise, single-step constraints on cosmological parameters, informing whether current analyses are complete and whether new physics or unaccounted systematics are at play.

  • Discovered by the JWST VENUS program, the lensed pair SN Ares and SN Athena could help resolve the Hubble tension by delivering independent measurements of the Hubble Constant.

  • This work treats gravitational lensing by galaxy clusters as a natural telescope, with time-domain astronomy at its core to study the distant Universe.

  • Overall, findings presented at the AAS247 meeting show that gravitational lensing of distant supernovae could become a key, independent probe of the universe’s expansion rate and physics.

  • SN Ares exploded when the Universe was about 4 billion years old and SN Athena about 6.5 billion years ago; their time delays will illuminate dark energy, which dominates roughly 70% of the cosmos.

  • The VENUS program uses deep JWST observations of about 60 rich galaxy clusters to find rare distant sources, including lensed SNe, ancient stars, and active black holes.

  • VENUS aims to uncover rare distant phenomena by targeting 60 rich galaxy clusters, leveraging strong lensing to study early-universe sources and transient events.

  • Time-domain astronomy, as illustrated by these lensed SNe, tracks objects that change over years to decades due to cosmic scales, adding complexity and opportunity in measurements.

  • Time delays between multiple images arise from the combination of gravitational lensing and cosmic expansion, providing a natural experimental handle on the expansion history and the Hubble Constant.

  • The next images offer a long baseline: Athena’s reappearances are expected in a few years, while Ares’ reappearances occur about six decades later, enabling time-delay measurements across decades.

Summary based on 2 sources


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