Einstein was right: General relativity confirmed
Equations predict the way that mass pulls on other mass in the universe

By Clara Moskowitz
Space.com

updated 6:11 p.m. CT, Wed., March. 10, 2010

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35805184/ns/technology_and_science-space


Score one more for Einstein. A new study has confirmed his theory of 
general relativity works on extremely large scales.

The study was one of the first rigorous tests of this theory of gravity 
beyond our solar system. The research found that even over vast scales 
of galaxies and clusters of galaxies, the equations of general 
relativity predict the way that mass pulls on other mass in the universe.

The new work also helps rule out a competing theory of gravity that 
seeks to do away with the need for bizarre concepts like dark matter and 
dark energy that have irked some scientists. This research indicates 
those pesky ideas may be here to stay.

What is relativity?
General relativity rocked the world of physics when Einstein first 
published his paper on the subject in 1915. The theory built on the 
traditional idea of gravity based on Isaac Newton's laws, but added 
fundamentally new concepts like the notion that mass deforms the shape 
of space-time. This means that objects and even light that move through 
space near a large mass will travel on a curved path. Furthermore, it 
means that mass can stretch or shrink time as well. For example, someone 
watching a black hole from a distance would observe a person falling 
into that black hole to fall extremely slowly.

To test this theory over distances up to 3.5 billion light-years from 
Earth, researchers analyzed a survey of about 70,000 galaxies. The 
scientists combined three different measurements. First, they calculated 
the weak gravitational lensing caused by the galaxies — that is, they 
measured how much the galaxies' mass was bending light from other 
galaxies around them by noting the average distortion of the surrounding 
galaxies' shapes.

Then, they combined this data with measurements of the galaxies' 
velocities to learn how the galaxies were moving toward and away from 
one another. Finally, the astrophysicists calculated how clustered the 
galaxies were together over various distances. All of these measurements 
combined created a system to test theories of gravity independent of 
particular parameters in the theories.

The scientists found that general relativity is consistent with their 
observations of the universe at large scales. They also tested two 
competing theories — the tensor-vector-scalar gravity (TeVeS) idea, and 
another called f(R) (pronounced "f of r").

The quantities predicted by f(R) were somewhat different from those 
observed, but still fell within the margin of error of the measurements, 
so this theory is still a possibility. TeVeS, however, made predictions 
that fell outside the observational error limits, so scientists think 
they can probably eliminate this theory from consideration.

"It wasn't clear at the outset that our errors would be small enough to 
be able to rule out other models — it was a nice surprise," said study 
leader Reinabelle Reyes, a graduate student at Princeton University in 
Princeton, N.J.

TeVeS was already looking doubtful based on recent observations of a 
pair of colliding galaxy clusters called the bullet cluster, which 
offered strong evidence for the existence of dark matter, Reyes said. 
The new research offers another nail in its coffin.

Solid support
While general relativity was already pretty well accepted among 
physicists, the new findings offer more solid support for the theory.

"It's good to know that general relativity is consistent," Reyes told 
SPACE.com. "Now we have something to hold on to saying the universe 
really works that way."

The study was detailed in the March 11 issue of the journal Nature.

To further judge between Einstein's theory and other ideas, including 
f(R), research on more galaxies will be necessary to reduce the margins 
of error on the data.

"Reyes and colleagues' measurements are significant not just because 
they are consistent within error with general relativity, but also 
because they point the way to future high-precision tests that will 
better distinguish between general relativity and some variant models," 
physicist J. Anthony Tyson of the University of California, Davis, wrote 
in an accompanying essay in the same issue of Nature. Tyson was not 
involved in the study.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35805184/ns/technology_and_science-space/

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

_______________________________________________
Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to