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Relativity Essay Research Paper RelativityAlbert Einstein (стр. 2 из 2)

RADIATION. This “sea” of electromagnetic radiation fills the universe

at a temperature of about 2.7K (2.7 degrees C above absolute zero).

Background radiation had been proposed by general relativity as the

remaining trace of an early, hot phase of the universe following the big

bang. The observed cosmic abundance of helium (20 to 30 percent by

weight) is also a required result of the big-bang conditions predicted

by relativity theory. In addition, general relativity has suggested

various kinds of celestial phenomena that could exist, including neutron

stars, black holes, gravitational lenses, and gravitational waves.

According to relativistic theory, neutron stars would be small but

extremely dense stellar bodies. A neutron star with a mass equal to

that of the Sun, for example, would have a radius of only 10 km (6 mi).

Stars of this nature have been so compressed by gravitational forces

that their density is comparable to densities within the nuclei of

atoms, and they are composed primarily of neutrons. Such stars are

thought to occur as a by-product of violent celestial events such as

supernovae and other gravitational implosions of stars. Since neutron

stars were first proposed in the 1930s, numerous celestial objects that

exhibit characteristics of this sort have been identified. In 1967 the

first of many objects now called pulsars was also detected. These

stars, which emit rapid regular pulses of radiation, are now taken to be

rapidly spinning neutron stars, with the pulse period represent the

period of rotation. Black holes are among the most exotic of the

predictions of general relativity, although the concept itself dates

from long before the 20th century. These theorized objects are

celestial bodies with so strong a gravitational field that no particles

or radiation can escape from them, not even light–hence the name. Black

holes most likely would be produced by the implosions of extremely

massive stars, and they could continue to grow as other material entered

their field of attraction. Some theorists have speculated that

supermassive black holes may exist at the centers of some clusters of

stars and of some galaxies, including our own. While the existence of

such black holes has not been proven beyond all doubt, evidence for

their presence at a number of known sites is very strong. In theory,

even a relatively small mass could become a black hole. The mass would

have to be compressed to higher and higher densities until it diminished

to a certain critical radius, the so-called “event horizon,” named the

SCHWARZSCHILD RADIUS because it was first calculated in 1916 by German

astronomer Karl Schwarzschild. (His calculations apply to a nonrotating

object. The figures for a rotating object were developed in 1963 by New

Zealand mathematician Roy Kerr.) For an object having the mass of the

Sun the event horizon would be approximately 3 km (2 mi). Scientists

such as the English theoretical physicist Stephen HAWKING have

speculated that tiny black holes may indeed exist. The concept of

gravitational lenses is based on the already discussed and proven

relativistic prediction that when light from a celestial object passes

near a massive body such as a star, its path is deflected. The amount

of deflection depends on the massiveness of the intervening body. From

this came the notion that very massive celestial objects such as

galaxies could act as the equivalent of crude optical lenses for light

coming from still more distant objects beyond them. An actual

gravitational lens was first identified in 1979. One phenomenon

predicted by general relativity has not yet been substantially verified,

however: the existence of gravitational waves. Gravitational waves

would be produced by changes in gravitational fields. They would travel

at the speed of light, transport energy, and induce relative motion

between pairs of particles in their path (or produce strains in more

massive objects). Astrophysicists think that gravitational waves should

be emitted by dynamic sources such as supernovae, massive binary (or

multiple-star) systems, and black holes or collisions between black

holes. Various attempts, unsuccessful thus far, have been made to

observe such waves. A more fundamental matter confronting general

relativity is that of the attempt being made by physicists to unite

gravitation with QUANTUM MECHANICS, the other paradigm of modern

physics. This search for some UNIFIED FIELD THEORY is the major task of

workers in QUANTUM COSMOLOGY.