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General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology

Title: Binary-pulsar tests of strong-field gravity

Abstract: This talk is based on my work in collaboration with Thibault Damour since 1991. Unified theories, like superstrings, predict the existence of scalar partners to the graviton. Such theories of gravity can be very close to general relativity in weak-field conditions (solar-system experiments), but can deviate significantly from it in the strong-field regime (near compact bodies, like neutron stars). Binary pulsars are thus the best tools available for testing these theories. This talk presents the four main binary-pulsar experiments, and discusses the constraints they impose on a generic class of tensor-scalar theories. It is shown notably that they rule out some models which are strictly indistinguishable from general relativity in the solar system. This illustrates the qualitative difference between binary-pulsar and solar-system tests of relativistic gravity.
Comments: 18 pages, Latex209, uses epsf.tex to include 8 Postscript figures. Talk given at the Conference "Pulsar Timing,...", Amsterdam 24-28 Sept 1996
Subjects: General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology (gr-qc); Astrophysics (astro-ph)
Journal reference: Proceedings ISBN 90-6984-247-5 (Amsterdam, 1999) p. 13
Report number: CPT-96/P.3411
Cite as: arXiv:gr-qc/9612039v1

Submission history

From: [view email]
[v1] Mon, 16 Dec 1996 14:59:51 GMT (47kb)