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Probing strong-field general relativity near black holes

Nature has sprinkled black holes of various sizes throughout the universe, from stellar mass black holes in X-ray sources to supermassive black holes of billions of solar masses in quasars. Astronomers today are probing the spacetime near black holes using X-rays, and gravitational waves will open a...

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Autores principales: Schutz, B F, Alvarez-Gaumé, Luís
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/977399
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author Schutz, B F
Alvarez-Gaumé, Luís
author_facet Schutz, B F
Alvarez-Gaumé, Luís
author_sort Schutz, B F
collection CERN
description Nature has sprinkled black holes of various sizes throughout the universe, from stellar mass black holes in X-ray sources to supermassive black holes of billions of solar masses in quasars. Astronomers today are probing the spacetime near black holes using X-rays, and gravitational waves will open a different view in the near future. These tools give us an unprecedented opportunity to test ultra-strong-field general relativity, including the fundamental theorem of the uniqueness of the Kerr metric and Roger Penrose's cosmic censorship conjecture. Already, fascinating studies of spectral lines are showing the extreme gravitational lensing effects near black holes and allowing crude measurements of black hole spin. When the ESA-NASA gravitational wave detector LISA begins its observations in about 10 years, it will make measurements of dynamical spacetimes near black holes with an accuracy greater even than that which theoreticians can reach with their computations today. Most importantly, when gravitational waves from colliding black holes are detected we will have the first direct observations of black holes themselves.
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spelling cern-9773992022-11-02T22:20:28Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/977399engSchutz, B FAlvarez-Gaumé, LuísProbing strong-field general relativity near black holesAstrophysics and AstronomyNature has sprinkled black holes of various sizes throughout the universe, from stellar mass black holes in X-ray sources to supermassive black holes of billions of solar masses in quasars. Astronomers today are probing the spacetime near black holes using X-rays, and gravitational waves will open a different view in the near future. These tools give us an unprecedented opportunity to test ultra-strong-field general relativity, including the fundamental theorem of the uniqueness of the Kerr metric and Roger Penrose's cosmic censorship conjecture. Already, fascinating studies of spectral lines are showing the extreme gravitational lensing effects near black holes and allowing crude measurements of black hole spin. When the ESA-NASA gravitational wave detector LISA begins its observations in about 10 years, it will make measurements of dynamical spacetimes near black holes with an accuracy greater even than that which theoreticians can reach with their computations today. Most importantly, when gravitational waves from colliding black holes are detected we will have the first direct observations of black holes themselves.oai:cds.cern.ch:9773992005-12-07
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Schutz, B F
Alvarez-Gaumé, Luís
Probing strong-field general relativity near black holes
title Probing strong-field general relativity near black holes
title_full Probing strong-field general relativity near black holes
title_fullStr Probing strong-field general relativity near black holes
title_full_unstemmed Probing strong-field general relativity near black holes
title_short Probing strong-field general relativity near black holes
title_sort probing strong-field general relativity near black holes
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/977399
work_keys_str_mv AT schutzbf probingstrongfieldgeneralrelativitynearblackholes
AT alvarezgaumeluis probingstrongfieldgeneralrelativitynearblackholes