Neutron Stars, Black Holes, and Gravitational Waves By Kolata, James J

Category

Astrophysics

Store

Wordery

Brand

Morgan & claypool publishers

Neutron Stars, Black Holes, and Gravitational Waves : IOP : 9781643274195 : 1643274198 : 10 Apr 2019 : Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity, published in 1915, made a remarkable prediction: gravitational radiation. Just like light (electromagnetic radiation), gravity could travel through space as a wave and affect any objects it encounters by alternately compressing and expanding them. However, there was a problem. The force of gravity is around a trillion, trillion, trillion times weaker than electromagnetism so the calculated compressions and expansions were incredibly small, even for gravity waves resulting from a catastrophic astrophysical event such as a supernova explosion in our own galaxy. Discouraged by this result, physicists and astronomers didn't even try to detect these tiny, tiny effects for over 50 years. Then, in the late 1960s and early 1970s, two events occurred which started the hunt for gravity waves in earnest. The first was a report of direct detection

28 GBP