Read the full article for free* in Classical and Quantum Gravity:
Tensor-multi-scalar theories: relativistic stars and 3 + 1 decomposition
Michael Horbatsch, Hector O Silva, Davide Gerosa, Paolo Pani, Emanuele Berti, Leonardo Gualtieri and Ulrich Sperhake 2015 Class. Quantum Grav. 32 204001
arXiv:1505.07462
*until 16/12/15

Large panel: Ulrich Sperhake and Emanuele Berti under Isaac Newton’s famous apple tree at Woolsthorpe Manor that (allegedly) started it all.
Clockwise in the small panels: Davide Gerosa, Hector O. Silva, Paolo Pani, Leonardo Gualtieri and Michael Horbatsch.
Newton’s theory of gravity was a spectacular achievement: for about two centuries, a simple law based on empirical observation was a perfect explanation for the behavior of gravity throughout the Solar System. Some cracks in this perfect edifice emerged around 1840, when François Arago, the director of the Paris Observatory, suggested to the French mathematician Urbain Le Verrier to study the details of Mercury’s orbital motion around the Sun using Newton’s gravity. Predictions from Le Verrier’s theory famously failed to match the observations. Mercury’s perihelion advances each time it orbits around the Sun. Most of the perihelion precession could be explained as due to the Continue reading
You must be logged in to post a comment.