General Relativity

Overview

General relativity is Albert Einstein's theory of gravity, which redefines Isaac Newton's picture of the invisible force between masses as curves in spacetime. In Einstein's model, the universe possesses an underlying fabric that mass and energy can bend. What we perceive as motion due to the pull of gravity is actually matter and light traveling along these bends.

Einstein's revision was necessary after he discovered that nothing could move faster than light, conflicting with Newton's belief that gravity had infinite speed. The equations of general relativity showed that it travels at the speed of light and explained inconsistencies between observations and predictions made by Newton's law of gravity, such as Mercury's orbit.

The theory predicted multiple phenomena that later proved to be true, including gravitational waves, black holes, differences in the passage of time at different elevations, and the bending of light around massive objects. General relativity enabled the development of GPS and provided the foundation for the Big Bang theory.

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