A century of general relativity: astrophysics and cosmology

Science
R D Blandford

Abstract

One hundred years after its birth, general relativity has become a highly successful physical theory in the sense that it has passed a large number of experimental and observational tests and finds extensive application to a wide variety of cosmic phenomena. It remains an active area of research as new tests are on the way, epitomized by the exciting prospect of detecting gravitational waves from merging black holes. General relativity is the essential foundation of the standard model of cosmology and underlies our description of the black holes and neutron stars that are ultimately responsible for the most powerful and dramatic cosmic sources. Its interface with physics on the smallest and largest scales will continue to provide fertile areas of investigation in its next century.

References

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Oct 4, 2005·Physical Review Letters·Frans Pretorius
Jan 1, 1934·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·G Lemaitre
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Jul 6, 2014·Physical Review Letters·P A R AdeUNKNOWN (BICEP2 Collaboration)
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Jan 1, 2014·Living Reviews in Relativity·Clifford M Will

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