Gravity of the Sun: Einstein's Calculation and Beyond

In summary, Einstein and his colleagues calculated the Sun's gravity to have a focus of about 550 AU. This value is currently estimated to be around 542 AU. While this calculation takes into account factors such as solar oblateness and frame dragging, it is also expected to apply to other phenomena such as neutrinos and gravitational waves. However, the Sun's transparency to these particles may affect the focal distance, potentially resulting in closer focuses. Due to limited technology, this theory has not been tested.
  • #1
Nik_2213
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IIRC, the Sun's gravity was calculated by Einstein et-al to provide a 'focus' about 550 AU out. Current value is ~542 AU.
Aside from effects due solar oblateness, frame dragging etc, may I assume this value also applies to eg neutrinos, gravitational waves etc etc ??
 
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  • #2
Yes and no.

The calculation is for rays grazing the Sun, and I would expect that neutrinos and gravitational waves grazing the same surface would focus at the same distance, give or take a small bit. But gravitational lenses are terrible lenses, and the focal distance depends very much on the distance of the ray from the Sun center at perihelion. And I suspect the Sun is transparent to neutrinos for some depth below where it becomes opaque to light. And it's transparent to gravitational waves right through. So you may well be able to find focuses for them closer to the Sun.

Note that we don't have good enough neutrino or gravitational wave astronomy instruments to test anything like gravitational lensing of these things, so this is purely theoretical at this stage. We've no reason to doubt it works, but it hasn't been tested.
 
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