It seems we have partially identified the issue, I know the gravitational lensing effect in a sense of imaging effect, i.e. a galaxy between us and a quasar images the quasar to us. Since we only see the last known direction of those photons, we get a ring.
My problem is trying to understand the effect of the gravitational potential of a galaxy on the photon paths when the source was in the same galaxy to begin with, not a gravitational lensing effect in the usual sense where some distant target is imaged. I recall that there is usually (?) a massive black hole in the middle of the galaxy, or at least some kind of source of massive gravitational potential. If it is so that the photons experience more bending closer to the gravitational potential, I would think that there is radial distortion on the position of the stars from the center of the galaxy that displaces stars towards the edge of the galaxy, and the closer their actual position is to the center, the greater the effect. I think I would need to put a drawing of this one out here, but on the other hand I wouldn't like to register in to yet again one more net service to provide the drawing.
Yes, I think now too that the brightness shouldn't be affected since the stars should be taken as point sources and then by definition any direction has equal weight.
Yes, the Milky Way does have a supermassive black hole at its center, which has a radius of about .08 AU (an AU, or astronomical unit, is the mean Earth-Sun distance), well within Mercury's orbit of about .39 AU (semi-major axis). For future reference, remember that the Schwarzschild radius of a black hole is given by
R
s = 2GM/c^2
In applying our approximation, two orders of magnitude is sufficient (more than, usually) for a "much greater" or "much less" approximation like the deflection angle one to hold; so, we can apply it to photons that pass no closer than 100 times R
s, which for the Milky Way's black hole, is about 8 AU, or out near Saturn's orbit in our solar system. The deflection of a photon that gets that close is approximately a whopping two radians, or about 120 degrees. However, this is of course absurdly close for a photon to get; what about b = 1 light year? That means the deflection angle is instead .1", which is tiny. Therefore, we can conclude that the central black hole has almost no lensing influence except in its immediate vicinity. Since the effect from stars is even less (the Sun has a mere 1.7" deflection for a surface-skimming photon), we can safely conclude that when observing targets in our own galaxy, gravitational lensing can be safely ignored in just about every situation.
One way of thinking about it is remembering that GR, despite being at its heart nonlinear (specifically in the metric*), in the weak field limit is linear, because it must give back Newtonian gravity in that situation, which IS linear. Then you can think about simply summing up the contributions from each mass a given photon encounters, because the principle of superposition applies. In this manner, it should become clear that given the vastness of space between the stars, virtually no lensing takes place unless it passes very close to something, which is very unlikely (just think about all the stars you can see at night in the Milky Way, and how their light is almost totally unobstructed, passing directly from them to your eyes). If that light
does pass very close to something massive, the deflection is noticeable and must be accounted for.
Now you might ask, why do we see significant lensing when galaxy clusters are involved, but not star clusters, despite even vaster distances being involved? Well, it turns out that while stars are amazingly far apart compared to their sizes, galaxies are not. Consider the distance between us and Andromeda, the nearest other massive galaxy to us. This is about 2.5 million light years, or 25 Milky Way diameters, discounting the dark matter halo. 25 solar diameters doesn't even get you to Mercury if you start from the Sun! This is to say nothing of getting to Alpha Centauri, which is about 40 million or so solar diameters away. So we can see that on the galactic scale, clusters are much denser than star clusters are, and thus are going to have a much greater lensing effect.
*Here are the Einstein field equations: R
ab + (Λ - R/2)g
ab = 8πG/c
4*T
abThey look superficially linear in the metric g
ab at first, until you remember that R
ab and T
ab, the Riemann curvature and stress-energy tensor respectively, both depend on the Christoffel symbols, which depend on derivatives of the metric. Happy happy fun times.