December 13, 2021

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Einstein's theory passes rigorous 16-year tests (Update)

Credit: © Michael Kramer/MPIfR
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Credit: © Michael Kramer/MPIfR

An international team has used telescopes around the world, including CSIRO's Parkes radio telescope—Murriyang, to complete the most challenging tests yet of Einstein's general theory of relativity.

The team, led by Professor Michael Kramer from the Max-Planck-Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, showed that Einstein's theory published in 1915 still holds true.

Dr. Dick Manchester, a Fellow at Australia's national science agency, CSIRO, and a member of the research team, explained how this result provides us with a more precise understanding of our Universe.

"The theory of general relativity describes how gravity works at large scales in the Universe, but it breaks down at the atomic scale where quantum mechanics reigns supreme," Dr. Manchester said.

"We needed to find ways of testing Einstein's theory at an intermediate scale to see if it still holds true. Fortunately, just the right cosmic laboratory, known as the 'double ', was found using the Parkes telescope in 2003.

"Our observations of the double pulsar over the past 16 years proved to be amazingly consistent with Einstein's general theory of relativity, within 99.99 percent to be precise," he said.

The double pulsar system is made up of two pulsars, rapidly rotating that emit like a cosmic lighthouse and create very strong gravitational fields.

One star rotates 44 times every second, while the second has a rotation period of 2.8 seconds. The stars complete an orbit every 2.5 hours.

CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope Credit: CSIRO/A. Cherney
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CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope Credit: CSIRO/A. Cherney

According to general relativity, the extreme accelerations in the double pulsar system strain the fabric of space-time and send out ripples that will slow the system. The two pulsars are predicted to collide in 85 million years' time.

With such a long timescale for this energy loss its effects are difficult to detect. Fortunately, clock-like ticks coming from the spinning pulsars are perfect tools to trace the tiny perturbations.

Associate Professor Adam Deller from Swinburne University and the ARC Center of Excellence for Gravitational Waves (OzGrav), another member of the research team, explained that the ticks from the pulsar 'clocks' had taken around 2,400 years to reach Earth.

"We modeled the precise arrival times of more than 20 billion of these clock ticks over 16 years," Dr. Deller said.

"That still wasn't enough to tell us how far away the stars are, and we needed to know that to test general relativity."

By adding in data from the Very Long Baseline Array—a network of telescopes spread across the globe—the research team was able to spot a tiny wobble in the star's positions every year, which revealed their distance from Earth.

"We'll be back in the future using new radio telescopes and new data analysis hoping to spot a weakness in general that will lead us to an even better gravitational ," Dr. Deller said.

The research is published today in the journal Physical Review X.

More information: M. Kramer et al, Strong-Field Gravity Tests with the Double Pulsar, Physical Review X (2021). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevX.11.041050

Journal information: Physical Review X

Provided by CSIRO

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