Exploring Black Holes: General Relativity & Astrophysics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology via MIT OpenCourseWare
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Overview
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Study of physical effects in the vicinity of a black hole as a basis for understanding general relativity, astrophysics, and elements of cosmology. Extension to current developments in theory and observation. Energy and momentum in flat spacetime; the metric; curvature of spacetime near rotating and nonrotating centers of attraction; trajectories and orbits of particles and light; elementary models of the Cosmos. Weekly meetings include an evening seminar and recitation. The last third of the semester is reserved for collaborative research projects on topics such as the Global Positioning System, solar system tests of relativity, descending into a black hole, gravitational lensing, gravitational waves, Gravity Probe B, and more advanced models of the Cosmos.
Syllabus
- einstein.pdf
- 1: Introduction to the Class
- 2: The Universe: Questions You Were Afraid to Ask
- questionsseminar2.pdf
- ligobhseminarapr03.pdf
- 5: Einstein's Field Equations
- 8: X-Ray Binaries and the Search for Black Holes
- nontech9.pdf
- 10: The Universe and Three Examples
- 13: Cosmic Structure Formation; From Inflation to Galaxies
- 8224_Sem03GKS2.pdf
- 8224baganoff_v2.pdf
- 8224baganoffGKS.pdf
Taught by
Prof. Edmund Bertschinger and Prof. Edwin F. Taylor