Yahoo India Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: Introduction to general relativity
  2. Choose From a Wide Selection Of Informative and Comprehensive Books For You. Amazon Offers an Array Of Unique Products From Hundreds Of Brands.

Search results

  1. General relativity is a theory of gravitation developed by Albert Einstein between 1907 and 1915. The theory of general relativity says that the observed gravitational effect between masses results from their warping of spacetime.

  2. General relativity is a beautiful scheme for describing the gravitational ̄eld and the equations it obeys. Nowadays this theory is often used as a prototype for other, more intricate constructions to describe forces between elementary particles or other branches of fundamental physics.

    • 402KB
    • 69
  3. General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity and Einstein's theory of gravity, is the geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of gravitation in modern physics.

  4. This course aims to provide some understanding of general relativity as a theory of gravity in terms of the geometric properties of spacetime. We proceed along the general line of thought formulated by Einstein in his original publications of the general theory of relativity. Only a few parts, including the treatment of the stress-

    • 509KB
    • 78
  5. 8.962 is MIT’s graduate course in general relativity, which covers the basic principles of Einstein’s general theory of relativity, differential geometry, experimental tests of general relativity, black holes, and cosmology.

  6. general relativity, part of the wide-ranging physical theory of relativity formed by the German-born physicist Albert Einstein. It was conceived by Einstein in 1916. General relativity is concerned with gravity, one of the fundamental forces in the universe.

  7. General relativity is Einstein's theory of gravity, in which gravitational forces are presented as a consequence of the curvature of spacetime. In general relativity, objects moving under gravitational attraction are merely flowing along the "paths of least resistance" in a curved, non-Euclidean space.