The following is a timeline of gravitational physics and general relativity.
Before 1500
1500s
1600s
1700s
1800s
- 1846 â Urbain Le Verrier and John Couch Adams independently show that the orbit of Uranus is perturbed by another planet, Neptune, promptly discovered by Johann Gottfried Galle.
- 1849 â Armand Fizeau makes the first terrestrial determination of the speed of light.
- 1855 â Le Verrier observes a 38 arc-second per century excess precession of Mercury's orbit and attributes it to another planet, inside Mercury's orbit. The planet, called Vulcan, was never found. Le Verrier's figure is revised by Simon Newcomb to 43 arc-second per century in 1882.
- 1876 â William Kingdon Clifford suggests that the motion of matter may be due to changes in the geometry of space.
- 1880 â Aurel Voss discovers the contracted Bianchi identities, subsequently rediscovered independently by Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro in 1889 and Luigi Bianchi in 1902.
- 1884 â William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) lectures on the issues with the wave theory of light with regards to the luminiferous ether.
- 1887 â Albert A. Michelson and Edward W. Morley in report a null result in their experiment to detect the ether drift.
- 1888 â Oliver Heaviside calculates the electromagnetic field of a moving point charge at constant velocity, and realizes, with some help by George Frederick Charles Searle, that the field contracts in the direction of motion.
- 1889 â Loránd Eötvös uses a torsion balance to test the weak equivalence principle to 1 part in one billion.
- 1892 â George Francis FitzGerald explains his hypothesis that the Michelson-Morley interferometer contracts in the direction of motion through the luminiferous ether to Oliver Lodge.
- 1893 â Ernst Mach states Mach's principle, the first constructive critique of the idea of Newtonian absolute space.
- 1897 â Henri Poincaré questions whether absolute space, absolute time, and Euclidean geometry are applicable to physics.
1900s
- 1902 â Paul Gerber explains the movement of the perihelion of Mercury using finite speed of gravity. His formula, at least approximately, matches the later model from Einstein's general relativity, but Gerber's theory was incorrect.
- 1902 â Henri Poincaré questions the concept of simultaneity in his book, Science and Hypothesis.
- 1904 â Hendrik Antoon Lorentz publishes the Lorentz transformations, so named by Henri Poincaré.
- 1902 â Henri Poincaré shows that the Lorentz transformations form a mathematical group, called the Lorentz group, and derives the relativistic formula for adding velocities.
- 1905 â Albert Einstein completes his special theory of relativity and examines relativistic aberration and the transverse Doppler effect.
- 1905 â Albert Einstein discovers the equivalence of mass and energy, in modern form. He notes that it may be tested using radioactive substances. He returns to the problem multiple times later.
- 1906 â Max Planck coins the term Relativtheorie. Albert Einstein later uses the term Relativitätstheorie in a conversation with Paul Ehrenfest. He originally prefers calling it Invariance Theory.
- 1906 â Max Planck discovers the energy-momentum relation and formulates a variational principle for special relativity.
- 1907 â Albert Einstein introduces the principle of equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass and uses it to predict gravitational lensing and gravitational redshift, historically known as the Einstein shift.
- 1907-8 â Hermann Minkowski introduces the Minkowski spacetime and expresses electromagnetic field strengths as a second-rank tensor. He also coins the terms spacelike, timelike, light cone, and world line. His paper is published posthumously.
- 1909 â Max Born proposes his notion of rigidity.
- 1909 â Paul Ehrenfest states the Ehrenfest paradox.
1910s
1920s
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
- 1960 â Joseph Weber begins work on his bars for detecting gravitational waves.
- 1960 â Martin Kruskal and George Szekeres independently introduce the KruskalâÂÂSzekeres coordinates for the Schwarzschild vacuum.
- 1960 â John Graves and Dieter Brill show that the ReissnerâÂÂNordström solution describe a spherical electrically charged black hole.
- 1960 â Ivor M. Robinson and Andrzej Trautman discover the Robinson-Trautman null dust solution.
- 1960 â Robert Pound and Glen Rebka test the gravitational redshift predicted by the equivalence principle to approximately 1%.
- 1961 âÂÂTullio Regge introduces the Regge calculus.
- 1961 â Carl H. Brans and Robert H. Dicke introduce BransâÂÂDicke theory, the first viable alternative theory with a clear physical motivation.
- 1961 â Pascual Jordan and Jürgen Ehlers develop the kinematic decomposition of a timelike congruence,
- 1961 â Robert Dicke, Peter Roll, and R. Krotkov refine the Eötvös experiment to an accuracy of 10<sup>âÂÂ11</sup>.
- 1962 â John Wheeler and Robert Fuller show that the Einstein-Rosen bridge is unstable.
- 1962 â Roger Penrose and Ezra T. Newman introduce the NewmanâÂÂPenrose formalism.
- 1962 â Ehlers and Wolfgang Kundt classify the symmetries of Pp-wave spacetimes.
- 1962 âÂÂJoshua Goldberg and Rainer K. Sachs prove the GoldbergâÂÂSachs theorem.
- 1962 â Ehlers introduces Ehlers transformations, a new solution generating method,
- 1962 â Richard Arnowitt, Stanley Deser, and Charles W. Misner introduce the ADM reformulation and global hyperbolicity,
- 1962 â Istvan Ozsvath and Englbert Schücking rediscover the circularly polarized monochromomatic gravitational wave.
- 1962 â Hans Adolph Buchdahl discovers Buchdahl's theorem.
- 1962 â Hermann Bondi introduces Bondi mass.
- 1962 â Hermann Bondi, M. G. van der Burg, A. W. Metzner, and Rainer K. Sachs introduce the asymptotic symmetry group of asymptotically flat, Lorentzian spacetimes at null (i.e., light-like) infinity.
- 1962 â Riccardo Giacconi and his team discover astronomical X-ray sources.
- 1963 â Roy Kerr discovers the Kerr solution, subsequently shown by Robert Boyer and Richard Lindquist and, independently, Brandon Carter and Roger Penrose to be describing a spinning black hole.
- 1963 â Newman, T. Unti and L.A. Tamburino introduce the NUT vacuum solution,
- 1963 â Roger Penrose introduces Penrose diagrams and Penrose limits.
- 1963 â Maarten Schmidt, Jesse Greenstein, and Allan Sandage discover the first quasi-stellar radio source (QSRS), 3C273, later renamed "quasar" by Hong-Yee Chiu and shown to be moving away from Earth due to the expansion of the Universe.
- 1963 â First Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics held in Dallas, December 16âÂÂ18.
- 1964 â Steven Weinberg shows that a quantum field theory of interacting massless spin-2 particles is Lorentz invariant only if it satisfies the principle of equivalence.
- 1964 â Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar determines a stability criterion.
- 1964 â Sjur Refsdal suggests that the Hubble constant could be determined using gravitational lensing.
- 1964 â Irwin Shapiro predicts a gravitational time delay of radiation travel as a test of general relativity.
- 1965 â Roger Penrose proves the first singularity theorem.
- 1965 â Ezra Newman and others introduce Kerr-Newman metric.
- 1965 â Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson accidentally discover the cosmic microwave background radiation. This rules out the steady-state model of Fred Hoyle and Jayant Narlikar.
- 1967 â John Archibald Wheeler popularizes "black hole" at a conference.
- 1967 â Jocelyn Bell and Antony Hewish discover pulsars.
- 1967 â Robert H. Boyer and R. W. Lindquist introduce BoyerâÂÂLindquist coordinates for the Kerr vacuum.
- 1967 â Bryce DeWitt publishes on canonical quantum gravity.
- 1967 â Werner Israel proves a special case of the no-hair theorem and the converse of Birkhoff's theorem.
- 1967 â Kenneth Nordtvedt develops PPN formalism.
- 1967 â Mendel Sachs publishes factorization of Einstein's field equations.
- 1967 â Hans Stephani discovers the Stephani dust solution.
- 1968 â F. J. Ernst discovers the Ernst equation.
- 1968 â B. Kent Harrison discovers the Harrison transformation, a solution-generating method.
- 1968 â Brandon Carter solves the geodesic equations for KerrâÂÂNewmann electrovacuum with Carter's constant.
- 1968 â Hugo D. Wahlquist discovers the Wahlquist fluid.
- 1968 â James Hartle and Kip Thorne obtain the HartleâÂÂThorne metric.
- 1968 â Irwin Shapiro and his colleagues present the first detection of the Shapiro delay.
- 1968 â Kenneth Nordtvedt studies a possible violation of the weak equivalence principle for self-gravitating bodies and proposes a new test of the weak equivalence principle based on observing the relative motion of the Earth and Moon in the Sun's gravitational field.
- 1969 â William B. Bonnor introduces the Bonnor beam.
- 1969 â Joseph Weber reports observation of gravitational waves a claim now generally discounted.
- 1969 â Penrose proposes the (weak) cosmic censorship hypothesis and the Penrose process,
- 1969 â Misner introduces the mixmaster universe.
- 1969 â Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat and Robert Geroch discuss global aspects of the Cauchy problem in general relativity.
- 1965-70 â Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and colleagues develops the post-Newtonian expansions.
- 1968-70 â Roger Penrose, Stephen Hawking, and George Ellis prove that singularities must arise in the Big Bang models.
1970s
- 1970 â Vladimir Alekseevich Belinski, Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov, and Evgeny Lifshitz introduce the BKL conjecture.
- 1970 â Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose prove trapped surfaces must arise in black holes.
- 1970 â Richard Price discovers Price's theorem.
- 1971 â David Scott demonstrates that a hammer and a feather fall at the same rate on the Moon.
- 1971 â Alfred Goldhaber and Michael Nieto give stringent limits on the photon mass. The strictest one is .
- 1971 â Stephen Hawking proves that the area of a black hole can never decrease.
- 1971 â Peter C. Aichelburg and Roman U. Sexl introduce the AichelburgâÂÂSexl ultraboost.
- 1971 â Introduction of the KhanâÂÂPenrose vacuum, a simple explicit colliding plane wave spacetime.
- 1971 â Robert H. Gowdy introduces the Gowdy vacuum solutions (cosmological models containing circulating gravitational waves).
- 1971 â Cygnus X-1, the first solid black hole candidate, discovered by Uhuru satellite.
- 1971 â William H. Press discovers by numerical simulation that black holes can pulsate.
- 1971 â Harrison and Estabrook algorithm for solving systems of PDEs.
- 1971 â James W. York introduces conformal method generating initial data for ADM initial value formulation.
- 1971 â Robert Geroch introduces Geroch group and a solution generating method.
- 1972 â Kip Thorne states the hoop conjecture.
- 1972 â Jacob Bekenstein proposes that black holes have a non-decreasing entropy which can be identified with the area.
- 1972 â Sachs introduces optical scalars and proves peeling theorem.
- 1972 â Rainer Weiss proposes concept of interferometric gravitational wave detector in an unpublished manuscript.
- 1972 â Joseph Hafele and Richard Keating perform the HafeleâÂÂKeating experiment.
- 1972 â Saul Teukolsky derives the Teukolsky equation.
- 1972 â Yakov B. Zel'dovich and Alexei Starobinsky speculate that black holes could radiate using quantum field theory in curved spacetime.
- 1972 â James Bardeen calculates the shadow of a black hole. This is later verified by the Event Horizon Telescope.
- 1973 â Brandon Carter, Stephen Hawking, and James Bardeen propose the four laws of black hole mechanics.
- 1973 â Charles W. Misner, Kip Thorne and John Archibald Wheeler publish the treatise Gravitation, a textbook that remains in use in the twenty-first century.
- 1973 â Stephen W. Hawking and George Ellis publish the monograph The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time.
- 1973 â Robert Geroch introduces the GHP formalism.
- 1973 â Homer Ellis obtains the Ellis drainhole, the first traversable wormhole.
- 1974 â Russell Alan Hulse and Joseph Hooton Taylor Jr. discover the HulseâÂÂTaylor binary pulsar, which they used as an indirect test of orbital decay due to gravitational radiation.
- 1974 â James W. York and Niall àMurchadha present the analysis of the initial value formulation and examine the stability of its solutions.
- 1974 â R. O. Hansen introduces HansenâÂÂGeroch multipole moments.
- 1974 â Stephen Hawking discovers Hawking radiation.
- 1975 â Stephen Hawking shows that the area of a black hole is proportional to its entropy, as previously conjectured by Jacob Bekenstein.
- 1975 â Roberto Colella, Albert Overhauser, and Samuel Werner observe the quantum-mechanical phase shift of neutrons due to gravity. Neutron interferometry was later used to test the principle of equivalence.
- 1975 â Chandrasekhar and Steven Detweiler compute the effects of perturbations on a Schwarzschild black hole.
- 1977 â Roger Blandford and Roman Znajek propose the BlandfordâÂÂZnajek process to explain how quasars are powered.
- 1978 â Belinskiàand Zakharov show how to solve Einstein's field equations using the inverse scattering transform; the first gravitational solitons,
- 1979 â Dennis Walsh, Robert Carswell, and Ray Weymann discover the gravitationally lensed quasar Q0957+561.
- 1979 â Jean-Pierre Luminet creates an image of a black hole with an accretion disk using computer simulation.
- 1979 â Steven Detweiler proposes using pulsar timing arrays to detect gravitational waves.
- 1979-81 â Richard Schoen and Shing-Tung Yau prove the positive mass theorem. Edward Witten independently proves the same thing.
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
- 2010 â A team at the U.S. National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) verifies relativistic time dilation using optical atomic clocks.
- 2011 â Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) finds no statistically significant deviations from the ÃÂCDM model of cosmology.
- 2012 â Hubble Ultra-Deep Field image released. It was created using data collected by the Hubble Space Telescope between 2003 and 2004.
- 2013 â NuSTAR and XMM-Newton measure the spin of the supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy NGC 1365.
- 2015 â Advanced LIGO reports the first direct detections of gravitational waves, GW150914 and GW151226, mergers of stellar-mass black holes. Gravitational-wave astronomy is born. No deviations from general relativity were found.
- 2017 â LIGO-VIRGO collaboration detects gravitational waves emitted by a neutron-star binary, GW170817. The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and the International Gamma-ray Astrophysics Laboratory (INTEGRAL) unambiguously detect the corresponding gamma-ray burst. LIGO-VIRGO and Fermi constrain the difference between the speed of gravity and the speed of light in vacuum to . This marks the first time electromagnetic and gravitational waves are detected from a single source, and give direct evidence that some (short) gamma-ray bursts are due to colliding neutron stars.
- 2017 â Multi-messenger astronomy reveals neutron-star mergers to be responsible for the nucleosynthesis of some heavy elements, such as strontium, via the rapid-neutron capture or r-process. Subsequent analyses indicate the presence of yttrium, lanthanum, and cerium.
- 2017 â MICROSCOPE satellite experiment verifies the principle of equivalence to in terms of the Eötvös ratio . The final report is published in 2022.
- 2017 â Principle of equivalence tested to 10<sup>âÂÂ9</sup> for atoms in a coherent state of superposition.
- 2017 â Scientists begin using gravitational-wave sources as "standard sirens" to measure the Hubble constant, finding its value to be broadly in line with the best estimates of the time. An improved result is published in 2019. Refinements of this technique will help resolve discrepancies between the different methods of measurements.
- 2017 â Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) arrives on the International Space Station.
- 2017-18 â Georgios Moschidis proves the instability of the anti-de Sitter spacetime.
- 2018 â Final paper by the Planck satellite collaboration. Planck operated between 2009 and 2013.
- 2018 â Mihalis Dafermos and Jonathan Luk disprove the strong cosmic censorship hypothesis for the Cauchy horizon of an uncharged, rotating black hole.
- 2018 â European Southern Observatory (ESO) observes gravitational redshift of radiation emitted by matter orbiting Sagittarius A*, the central supermassive black hole of the Milky Way, and verifies the innermost stable circular orbit for that object.
- 2018 â Advanced LIGO-VIRGO collaboration constrains equations of state for a neutron star using GW170817.
- 2018 â Luciano Rezzolla, Elias R. Most, and Lukas R. Weih used gravitational-wave data from GW170817 constrain the possible maximum mass for a neutron star to around 2.01 to 2.16 (solar masses).
- 2018 â Kris Pardo, Maya Fishbach, Daniel Holz, and David Spergel limit the number of spacetime dimensions through which gravitational waves can propagate to 3 + 1, in line with general relativity and ruling out models that allow for "leakage" to higher dimensions of space. Analyses of GW170817 have also ruled out many alternatives to general relativity, such as scalar-tensor theory and bimetric gravity, and proposals for dark energy.
- 2018 â Two different experimental teams report highly precise values of Newton's gravitational constant that slightly disagree.
- 2019 â Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) releases an image of supermassive black hole M87*, and measures its mass and shadow. Results are confirmed in 2024.
- 2019 â Advanced LIGO and VIRGO detect GW190814, the collision of a 26-solar-mass black hole and a 2.6-solar-mass object, either an extremely heavy neutron star or a very light black hole. This is the largest mass gap seen in a gravitational-wave source to-date.
2020s
- 2020 â Principle of equivalence tested for individual atoms using atomic interferometry to ~10<sup>âÂÂ12</sup>.
- 2020 â ESO observes Schwarzschild precession of the star S2 about Sagittarius A*.
- 2021 â Jun Ye and his team measure gravitational redshift with an accuracy of 7.6 à10<sup>âÂÂ21</sup> using an ultracold cloud of 100,000 strontium atoms in an optical lattice.
- 2021 â EHT measures the polarization of the ring of M87*, and other properties of the magnetic field in its vicinity.
- 2021 â EHT releases an image of Sagittarius A*, measures its shadow, and shows that it is accurately described by the Kerr metric.
- 2022 â Chris Overstreet and his team observe the gravitational Aharonov-Bohm effect using an experimental design from 2012.
- 2022 â James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) publishes its first image, a deep-field photograph of the SMACS 0723 galaxy cluster.
- 2022 â Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory detects GRB 221009A, the brightest gamma-ray burst recorded.
- 2022 â JWST identifies several candidate high-redshift objects, corresponding to just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang.
- 2023 â James Nightingale and colleagues detect Abell 1201, an ultramassive black hole (33 billion ), using strong gravitational lensing.
- 2023 â Matteo Bachetti and colleagues confirm that neutron star M82 X-2 is violating the Eddington limit, making it an ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX).
- 2023 â Team led by Dong Sheng and Zheng-Tian Lu found a null result for the coupling between quantum spin and gravity to 10<sup>âÂÂ9</sup>.
- 2023 â The North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav), the European Pulsar Timing Array (EPTA), the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array (Australia), and the Chinese Pulsar Timing Array report detection of a gravitational-wave background.
- 2023 â Geraint F. Lewis and Brendon Brewer present evidence of cosmological time dilation in quasars.
- 2023 â CERN demonstrates by experiment that antimatter obeys the weak principle of equivalence, meaning it does not have antigravitational properties.
- 2024 â The Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO) collaboration imposes stringent limits on violations of Lorentz invariance proposed in certain theories of quantum gravity using GRB 221009A.
- 2024 â ÃÂlvaro ÃÂlvarez-DomÃÂnguez, Luis J. Garay, Eduardo MartÃÂn-MartÃÂnez, and José Polo-Gómez show that quantum electrodynamics prevents a kugelblitz from forming.
- 2025 â LIGO-VIRGO-KAGRA collaboration verifies Hawking's area theorem for two merging black holes with GW250114, the clearest gravitational-wave signal to-date. Alternatives to general relativity are further constrained.
See also
References
External links