turbo-1 said:
I am not comfortable with the concept of "gravitational lensing" - invoking gravitation as the means by which light rays are refracted and distorted. It posits that gravity (an effect of space-time distortion) is the cause of lensing (another effect of space-time distortion). Please check this thread.
Does the following description make you feel any happier?
Light rays, like matter, follow geodesics in space-time. Well, actually, this statement is only approximately true - it's almost true, but it's only strictly true when the energy of the piece of matter or the light ray is sufficiently low. Fortunately, this is a good enough approximation for typical applications including gravitational lensing (or planetary orbits, for that matter).
The ultimate origin of curvature in space-time is the stress-energy tensor, T
ab, which generates a curvature in space-time according to Einstein's field equations, G
ab = T
ab. While G
ab is zero in regions where T
ab is zero, the general curvature tensor, R
abcd is not. More specifically, the Ricci component of R is zero when T
ab=0, but the Weyl component of R is non-zero.
If this does make you feel better, great. If not, why not - what's missing?