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Quite a readable survey of Einstein's achievements and vision. Presents key concepts on spacetime curvature, the flow of time, the General Theory, and its consequences for cosmology.
An original work by the father of relativity himself. Mostly accessible (with some mental effort!) but ther e are a few spots where the math gets a bit intense.
Highly acclaimed popular account of the latest knowledge on Singularities, Black Holes and their implications for cosmology. Can be a bit heavy-going in places, though. There's also an accompanying CD-ROM produced by Crunch Media Corp. and published by Scientific American (1994).
Very accessible cartoon exposition of Einstein's life and times and how he challenged conventional wisdom to come up with the Special Theory.
Comprehensive survey of the field of relativity: its applications to physics and cosmology; its history; and a lot of background on the roles of the key players.
A interactive survey of Einstein's life and times, along with an intelligible exposition of his main theories and their place in modern physics and cosmology.
Excellent and highly accessible distillation of "gravitational lensing" predicted by the General Theory of Relativity.
Very readable account of why, from the standpoint of General Relativity, gravity isn't a "force acting at a distance," but is instead bound up with the curvature of spacetime.
Good backgrounder on the numerous tests that General Relativity has been put through.
"A New Path is Discovered for Study of Black Holes." New York Times, June 27, 1995.
"Astrophysical Crash: Computing Black Holes." access (NCSA's computational science newsletter), Spring 1994, p.12.
"Binary Neutron Stars." Scientific American, May 1995, p. 54-61.
"A Close Look at an Active Galaxy's Engine." Science, Vol. 267, March 24, 1995, p. 1768.
"Does the Milky Way Hide Its Black Hole?" Science News, Vol.147, April 15, 1995, p. ??
"New Evidence of Galactic Black Hole." Science News, Vol. 147, p. 36
"Radio Galaxies: Born in Cosmic Crackups?" Science, Vol. 268, June 23, 1995, p. 1703.
"Space Telescope Confirms Theory of Black Holes." New York Times, May 26, 1994.
"Theorists Make a Bid to Eliminate Black Holes." Science, Vol. 266, December 23, p.1945
"Catching the Wave." Scientific American, March 1992, p. 90-99.
"The Last Three Minutes." Science News, Vol 143, June 26, 1993, p. 408-409.
"LIGO: A $250 Million Gamble." Science, Vol. 260, April 30, 1993, p. 612-614.
"Two Sites for Catching Gravitational Waves." Science News, Vol.141, February 29, 1992, p. 134.
"Waves of the Future." Forefronts (Cornell Theory Center newsletter), Vol.10, No. 1, Winter 1995, p.13. (First appeared in HPC Wire, February 3, 1995.)
"Binary Neutron Stars." Scientific American, May, 1995, p. 53-61
"LIGO: The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory." Science, Vol. 256, April 17, 1992, p. 325-333.
"Catching Einstein's Waves." IEEE Computational Science and Engineering, Spring 1994, p. 8.
"Geometry of a Black Hole Collision." Science, Vol. 270, November 10, p.941-948.
"Visualizing Black Hole Space-times." IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, January 1993, p. 12-14.
For additional research papers on related topics, visit The NCSA Relativity Group's own listing.
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