List of contributors to general relativity

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a partial list of persons who have made major contributions to the (mainstream) development of general relativity, as acknowledged by standard texts on the subject. Some related lists are mentioned at the bottom of the page.

A[]

B[]

James M. Bardeen
  • Robert M L Baker, Jr. (high-frequency gravitational waves),
  • James M. Bardeen (Bardeen vacuum, black hole mechanics, gauge-invariant linear perturbations of Friedmann-Lemaître cosmologies),
  • Barry Barish (LIGO builder, gravitational-waves observation),
  • Robert Bartnik (existence of ADM mass for asymptotically flat vacuums, quasilocal mass),
  • Jacob Bekenstein (black hole entropy),
  • Vladimir A. Belinsky (BKL conjecture, inverse scattering transform solution generating methods),
  • Peter G. Bergmann (constrained Hamiltonian dynamics),
  • Bruno Bertotti (Bertotti–Robinson electrovacuum),
  • Jiří Bičák (exact solutions of Einstein field equations),
  • Heinz Billing (prototype of laser interferometric gravitational-wave detector),
  • George David Birkhoff (Birkhoff's theorem),
  • Hermann Bondi (gravitational radiation, Bondi radiation chart, Bondi mass–energy–momentum, LTB dust, maverick models),
  • William B. Bonnor (Bonnor beam solution),
  • Robert H. Boyer (Boyer–Lindquist coordinates),
  • Vladimir Braginsky (gravitational-wave detector, quantum nondemolition (QND) measurement)
  • Carl H. Brans (Brans–Dicke theory),
  • Hubert Bray (Riemannian Penrose inequality),
  • Hans Adolph Buchdahl (Buchdahl fluid, Buchdahl theorem),
  • Claudio Bunster (BTZ black hole, Surface terms in Hamiltonian formulation),
  • William L. Burke (Burke potential, textbook)

C[]

Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat
  • Bernard Carr (self-similarity hypothesis, primordial black holes),
  • Brandon Carter (no-hair theorem, Carter constant, black-hole mechanics, variational principle for Ernst vacuums),
  • Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (Chandrasekhar limit, colliding plane waves, quasinormal modes, relativistic stars, monograph[note 1]),
  • Jean Chazy (Chazy-Curzon vacuum),
  • Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat (formerly Yvonne Bruhat; local existence and uniqueness of solutions to the vacuum Einstein equations, initial value formulations, textbook),
  • Demetrios Christodoulou (naked singularity in LTB dust, stability of Minkowski vacuum),
  • Orest Chwolson (gravitational lensing),
  • Alejandro Corichi (fundamental contributions to quantum gravity and quantum loop gravity)

D[]

Stanley Deser
  • Thibault Damour (gravitational radiation),
  • Georges Darmois (matching conditions, Darmois vacuum),
  • Stanley Deser (ADM initial value formulation, effective field theory),
  • Bryce DeWitt (Wheeler–DeWitt equation),
  • Robert H. Dicke (Brans–Dicke theory, parametrized post-Newtonian (PPN) formalism, background radiation),
  • Paul A.M. Dirac (graviton, monograph),
  • Tevian Dray (asymptotic structure, gravitational shock waves),
  • Ronald Drever (LIGO, gravitational-wave detectors and observation)


E[]

Arthur Stanley Eddington

F[]

Enrico Fermi
  • Enrico Fermi (Fermi coordinates, Fermi–Walker transport),
  • Richard Feynman (sticky bead argument [as 'Mr. Smith'], supermassive stars, derivation of the Einstein field equations from quantum field theory, Feynman Lectures on Gravitation),
  • David Finkelstein (Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates),
  • Vladimir Aleksandrovich Fock (textbook, harmonic coordinates),
  • Robert L. Forward (gravitational-wave detectors),
  • William A. Fowler (relativistic stellar models, gravitational collapse),
  • Alexander Friedmann (Friedmann cosmological models)

G[]

H[]

I[]

J[]

K[]

Roy Patrick Kerr

L[]

Lev Landau

M[]

Hermann Minkowski


N[]

O[]

  • Robert Oppenheimer (gravitational collapse, Oppenheimer–Volkoff limit, Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff (TOV) equation, Oppenheimer–Snyder black hole),
  • Amos Ori (black hole interiors, time machines, radiation reaction, gravitational collapse)

P[]

Roger Penrose
  • Achilles Papapetrou (chart for Ernst vacuum family, Majumdar–Papapetrou electrovacuums, Dixon–Papapetrou equations),
  • Paul Painlevé (Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates),
  • Roger Penrose (Hawking–Penrose singularity theorems, Penrose diagrams, techniques from algebraic geometry and differential topology, Penrose limits, cosmic censorship hypotheses, Penrose inequalities, geometry of gravitational plane waves, impulsive waves, Penrose–Khan colliding plane wave, Newman–Penrose formalism, Weyl curvature hypothesis, highly influential monograph[note 4]),
  • Alexei Zinovievich Petrov (Petrov classification of algebraic properties of Weyl curvature tensor),
  • Tsvi Piran (gravitational collapse),
  • Felix A. E. Pirani (gravitational radiation, Petrov–Pirani classification of algebraic properties of Weyl curvature tensor),
  • Jerzy F. Plebański (Plebanski vacuum, Plebanski action),
  • Eric Poisson (black hole interiors, mass inflation, post-Newtonian approximation, monographs[note 5]),
  • William H. Press (gravitational-wave astronomy, problem book),
  • Frans Pretorius (numerical relativity simulation),
  • Richard H. Price (Price's theorem, books)

R[]

  • George Yuri Rainich (Rainich conditions),
  • A. K. Raychaudhuri (Raychaudhuri equation),
  • Tullio Regge (Regge calculus),
  • Hans Reissner (Reissner–Nordström metric),
  • Wolfgang Rindler (Rindler chart for Minkowski vacuum),
  • Hans Ringström (strong cosmic censorship holds for T3-Gowdy vacuums),
  • Howard Percy Robertson (role of curvature, parametrized post-Newtonian formalism, Robertson–Walker metric),
  • Ivor Robinson (Bel–Robinson tensor, Bertotti–Robinson electrovacuum),
  • Nathan Rosen (Erez–Rosen solution, Einstein–Rosen bridge, Einstein–Rosen gravitational waves),
  • Remo Ruffini (particle motion in black holes, textbook)

S[]

Karl Schwarzschild

T[]

Saul Teukolsky


U[]

  • William G. Unruh (Unruh radiation)

V[]

W[]

John Archibald Wheeler

X[]

Y[]

Z[]

  • Vladimir E. Zakharov (inverse scattering transform solution generating method),
  • Yakov Borisovich Zel'dovich (early evidence for no-hair theorem, early evidence of black-hole radiation, relativistic astrophysics)

Notes[]

  1. ^ The Mathematical Theory of Black Holes.
  2. ^ Mathematical Theory of Relativity and Internal Constitution of the Stars.
  3. ^ a b See Course on Theoretical Physics, Volume 2.
  4. ^ Techniques of Differential Topology in Relativity.
  5. ^ A Relativist's Toolkit: The Mathematics of Black-hole Mechanics and Gravity: Newtonian, Post-Newtonian, Relativistic (with Clifford M. Will).
  6. ^ Gravity: Newtonian, Post-Newtonian, Relativistic (with Eric Poisson).

See also[]

Retrieved from ""