Looking for indexed pages…
| General relativity | |
| 💡No image available | |
| Overview | |
| Field | Gravitation |
| Developer | Albert Einstein |
| Theory name | General relativity |
| First presented | 1915 |
| Spacetime framework | Curved spacetime |
General relativity (GR) is a fundamental theory of gravitation that describes gravity not as a force, but as a consequence of spacetime curvature caused by energy and momentum. Proposed by Albert Einstein in 1915, it extends special relativity by incorporating gravity through differential geometry. The theory has been confirmed by numerous experiments and observations, including measurements of gravitational waves and the behavior of light near massive objects.
In general relativity, the geometry of spacetime is dynamic: matter and energy determine the curvature of spacetime, and that curvature in turn governs the motion of matter and light. The central mathematical framework uses tensor calculus and the geometry of pseudo-Riemannian manifold, with physics formulated through the Einstein field equations.
Conceptually, GR replaces the Newtonian idea of gravitational attraction with the statement that free-falling bodies follow geodesic paths in curved spacetime. This accounts for classical tests, such as the precession of the perihelion of Mercury, as well as relativistic effects like gravitational time dilation in weak gravitational fields.
The Einstein field equations relate the spacetime curvature—expressed through the Einstein tensor—to the stress–energy content of matter. In the standard formulation, the equations can be written schematically as a relationship between curvature and the stress–energy tensor, with a possible cosmological term that influences the large-scale structure of the universe.
A widely discussed feature of GR is that its solutions can represent gravitational fields even in vacuum. For example, the Schwarzschild solution describes the spacetime outside a non-rotating, spherically symmetric mass, while the Kerr metric generalizes the description to rotating bodies. Such exact solutions clarify the existence of phenomena like black holes, including event horizons and frame-dragging effects.
General relativity predicts that light is deflected by gravity and that time runs differently in different gravitational potentials. These effects underpin measurements that historically began with tests of gravitational lensing and have expanded to modern astronomical surveys. Observations of strong lensing offer constraints on the distribution of mass in galaxies and galaxy clusters, and they can probe deviations from GR in certain regimes.
GR also predicts the existence of gravitational waves—ripples in spacetime emitted by accelerated masses—first inferred from theory by Einstein and later modeled in detail using the linearized approximation around flat spacetime. Direct detections have been reported by observatories such as LIGO, with subsequent observations and multi-messenger follow-ups involving facilities and spacecraft that detect electromagnetic counterparts.
On cosmological scales, general relativity provides the foundation of modern physical cosmology. By assuming large-scale homogeneity and isotropy, GR leads naturally to the family of expanding-universe models commonly summarized by the Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric. These models connect the dynamics of spacetime with the expansion rate and the contents of the universe.
The observed acceleration of cosmic expansion has motivated the introduction of a cosmological constant or related components such as dark energy. While GR accommodates such terms mathematically, the physical origin of the accelerated expansion remains an area of active research. In many formulations, the theory also underlies the interpretation of the cosmic microwave background and the growth of large-scale structure.
General relativity is extraordinarily successful in explaining gravitational phenomena across a wide range of energies, yet it is not a complete theory of nature. It is widely expected that GR must be reconciled with quantum mechanics and potentially with a full theory of quantum gravity. Challenges arise, for example, in the behavior of spacetime near singularities predicted by some solutions, such as those associated with idealized black holes.
In parallel, researchers test GR for possible deviations using precision measurements and astrophysical observations. Constraints are derived from phenomena including binary pulsar timing, black hole shadow imaging, and comparisons between predicted and observed gravitational-wave waveforms. Continued work aims both to verify GR in new regimes and to explore alternative theories that may capture quantum or high-curvature effects.
Categories: General relativity, Gravitation, Spacetime, Mathematical physics, Albert Einstein
This article was generated by AI using GPT Wiki. Content may contain inaccuracies. Generated on March 26, 2026. Made by Lattice Partners.
9.6s$0.00161,680 tokens