Timeline of gravitational physics and relativity

Timeline of gravitational physics and general relativity

Before 1500

  • 3rd century BC - Aristarchus of Samos proposes heliocentric model, measures the distance to the Moon and its size

1500s

  • 1543 – Nicolaus Copernicus places the Sun at the gravitational center, starting a revolution in science
  • 1583 – Galileo Galilei induces the period relationship of a pendulum from observations (according to later biographer).
  • 1586 – Simon Stevin demonstrates that two objects of different mass accelerate at the same rate when dropped.
  • 1589 – Galileo Galilei describes a hydrostatic balance for measuring specific gravity.
  • 1590 – Galileo Galilei formulates modified Aristotelean theory of motion (later retracted) based on density rather than weight of objects.

1600s

  • 1602 – Galileo Galilei conducts experiments on pendulum motion.
  • 1604 – Galileo Galilei conducts experiments with inclined planes and induces the law of falling objects.
  • 1607 – Galileo Galilei arrives a mathematical formulation of the law of falling objects based on his earlier experiments.
  • 1608 – Galileo Galilei discovers the parabolic arc of projectiles through experiment.
  • 1609 – Johannes Kepler describes the motion of planets around the Sun, now known as Kepler's laws of planetary motion.
  • 1640 – Ismaël Bullialdus suggests an inverse-square gravitational force law.
  • 1665 – Isaac Newton introduces an inverse-square universal law of gravitation uniting terrestrial and celestial theories of motion and uses it to predict the orbit of the Moon and the parabolic arc of projectiles.
  • 1684 – Isaac Newton proves that planets moving under an inverse-square force law will obey Kepler's laws
  • 1686 – Isaac Newton uses a fixed length pendulum with weights of varying composition to test the weak equivalence principle to 1 part in 1000

1700s

1800s

1900s

1950s

1960s

1970s

  • 1970 – Frank J. Zerilli derives the Zerilli equation,
  • 1970 – Vladimir A. Belinskiǐ, Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov, and Evgeny Lifshitz introduce the BKL conjecture,
  • 1970 – Chandrasekhar pushes on to 5/2 post-Newtonian order,
  • 1970 – Hawking and Penrose prove trapped surfaces must arise in black holes,
  • 1970 – the Kinnersley-Walker photon rocket,
  • 1970 – Peter Szekeres introduces colliding plane waves,
  • 1971 – Peter C. Aichelburg and Roman U. Sexl introduce the Aichelburg–Sexl ultraboost,
  • 1971 – Introduction of the Khan–Penrose vacuum, a simple explicit colliding plane wave spacetime,
  • 1971 – Robert H. Gowdy introduces the Gowdy vacuum solutions (cosmological models containing circulating gravitational waves),
  • 1971 – Cygnus X-1, the first solid black hole candidate, discovered by Uhuru satellite,
  • 1971 – William H. Press discovers black hole ringing by numerical simulation,
  • 1971 – Harrison and Estabrook algorithm for solving systems of PDEs,
  • 1971 – James W. York introduces conformal method generating initial data for ADM initial value formulation,
  • 1971 – Robert Geroch introduces Geroch group and a solution generating method,
  • 1972 – Jacob Bekenstein proposes that black holes have a non-decreasing entropy which can be identified with the area,
  • 1972 – Carter, Hawking and James M. Bardeen propose the four laws of black hole mechanics,
  • 1972 – Sachs introduces optical scalars and proves peeling theorem,
  • 1972 – Rainer Weiss proposes concept of interferometric gravitational wave detector,
  • 1972 – J. C. Hafele and R. E. Keating perform Hafele–Keating experiment,
  • 1972 – Richard H. Price studies gravitational collapse with numerical simulations,
  • 1972 – Saul Teukolsky derives the Teukolsky equation,
  • 1972 – Yakov B. Zel'dovich predicts the transmutation of electromagnetic and gravitational radiation,
  • 1973 – P. C. Vaidya and L. K. Patel introduce the Kerr–Vaidya null dust solution,
  • 1973 – Publication by Charles W. Misner, Kip S. Thorne and John A. Wheeler of the treatise Gravitation, the first modern textbook on general relativity,
  • 1973 – Publication by Stephen W. Hawking and George Ellis of the monograph The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time,
  • 1973 – Geroch introduces the GHP formalism,
  • 1974 – Russell Hulse and Joseph Hooton Taylor, Jr. discover the Hulse–Taylor binary pulsar,
  • 1974 – James W. York and Niall Ó Murchadha present the analysis of the initial value formulation and examine the stability of its solutions,
  • 1974 – R. O. Hansen introduces Hansen–Geroch multipole moments,
  • 1974: –Tullio Regge introduces the Regge calculus,
  • 1974 – Hawking discovers Hawking radiation,
  • 1975 – Chandrasekhar and Steven Detweiler compute quasinormal modes,
  • 1975 – Szekeres and D. A. Szafron discover the Szekeres–Szafron dust solutions,
  • 1976 – Penrose introduces Penrose limits (every null geodesic in a Lorentzian spacetime behaves like a plane wave),
  • 1976 – Gravity Probe A experiment confirmed slowing the flow of time caused by gravity matching the predicted effects to an accuracy of about 70 parts per million.
  • 1976 – Robert Vessot and Martin Levine use a hydrogen maser clock on a Scout D rocket to test the gravitational redshift predicted by the equivalence principle to approximately 0.007%
  • 1978 – Penrose introduces the notion of a thunderbolt,
  • 1978 – Belinskiǐ and Zakharov show how to solve Einstein's field equations using the inverse scattering transform; the first gravitational solitons,
  • 1979 – Richard Schoen and Shing-Tung Yau prove the positive mass theorem.
  • 1979 – Dennis Walsh, Robert Carswell, and Ray Weymann discover the gravitationally lensed quasar Q0957+561

After 1980

See also

References

  1. "Spherical Gravitational Waves". Cdsads.u-strasbg.fr. Retrieved 2012-07-20.
  2. "Making Waves". TERP. 2016-08-18. Retrieved 2016-11-07.
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