Einstein’s
GR modeling of gravity
corroborated: space and time do co-mingle near a black hole (20 Jan 2020)
6 objects orbiting the center of our galaxy & supermassive black hole as cross (CNN)
b July 25, 2019
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/07/25/world/einstein-theory-general-relativity-star-scn/index.html
Einstein's general relativity stands, study says - for now
(CNN)Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity, which suggests
that gravity is due to the curvature of space and time, is more than 100 years
old. And it's holding up as researchers analyze the behavior of gravity in
space -- but it may not last forever, according to a new study.
The 1915 theory
was tested when University of California, Los Angeles astronomy and physics professor
Andrea Ghez and her team measured gravity near the black hole at the center
of our home galaxy, the Milky Way.
Their study
was published Thursday in the journal Science.
"Einstein's
right, at least for now," said Ghez, a co-lead author of the study, in a
statement. "We can absolutely rule out Newton's law of gravity. Our
observations are consistent with Einstein's theory of general relativity.
However, his theory is definitely showing vulnerability. It cannot fully
explain gravity inside a black hole, and at some point we will need to move beyond
Einstein's theory to a more comprehensive theory of gravity that explains what
a black hole is."
But at the
moment, the theory is the best description of how gravity works, Ghez said.
Her team was one
of only two in the world to observe the complete 16-year orbit of a star called
S0-2 around the supermassive black hole at the galactic center.
Their observations
spanned three dimensions. The star made its closest approach to the black hole
in April, May and September 2018, moving at 16 million miles per hour. Spectral
data spanning wavelengths of light provided insight about the star's
composition, which was combined with measurements the team had gathered over
the past 24 years.
The spectral data
was collected by a spectrograph built at the university and collected at the
W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii. This allowed the researchers to determine precise
measurements of the star's motion as one dimension and combine those with
images and observations of the star taken at Keck.
"What's so
special about S0-2 is we have its complete orbit in three dimensions,"
Ghez said. "That's what gives us the entry ticket into the tests of
general relativity. We asked how gravity behaves near a supermassive black hole
and whether Einstein's theory is telling us the full story. Seeing stars go
through their complete orbit provides the first opportunity to test fundamental
physics using the motions of these stars."
The researchers
were able to see how space and time commingled near the black hole, she said.
"In Newton's
version of gravity, space and time are separate, and do not co-mingle; under
Einstein, they get completely co-mingled near a black hole," she said in
the statement.
Richard Green,
director of the National Science Foundation's Division of Astronomical
Sciences, noted that "Making a measurement of such fundamental importance
has required years of patient observing, enabled by state-of-the-art
technology. Through their rigorous efforts, Ghez and her collaborators have
produced a high-significance validation of Einstein's idea about strong
gravity."
Because of its
distance from the black hole, the star doesn't get pulled into it.
The team tracked
particles of light called photons that traveled from the star to Earth over
26,000 years. It took years of planning for Ghez and her team to be ready to
make the measurements of the photons.
"For us,
it's visceral, it's now -- but it actually happened 26,000 years ago," she
said.
Ghez studies more
than 3,000 stars that orbit the black hole at the center of our galaxy. Going
forward, she wants to test more of the stars near the black hole, including
S0-102, which has a short orbit of 11½ years. Most of the other stars have an
orbit that exceeds the average human lifespan.
"We're
learning how gravity works. It's one of four fundamental forces and the one we
have tested the least," she said. "There are many regions where we
just haven't asked, how does gravity work here? It's easy to be overconfident
and there are many ways to misinterpret the data, many ways that small errors
can accumulate into significant mistakes, which is why we did not rush our
analysis."
Ref/ Tuan Do, Aurelien Hees, Andrea Ghez, et al. Relativistic redshift of the star S0-2 orbiting the Galactic Center supermassive black hole. Science, Vol. 365, Issue 6454, pp. 664-668. 16 Aug 2019. DOI: 10.1126/science.aav8137
Ref/ Tuan Do, Aurelien Hees, Andrea Ghez, et al. Relativistic redshift of the star S0-2 orbiting the Galactic Center supermassive black hole. Science, Vol. 365, Issue 6454, pp. 664-668. 16 Aug 2019. DOI: 10.1126/science.aav8137
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