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General relativity (GR) or general relativity theory (GRT) is the theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915. The conceptual core of general relativity, from which its other consequences largely follow, is the Principle of Equivalence, which describes gravitation and acceleration as different perspectives of the same thing, and which was originally stated by Einstein in 1907 as:
We shall therefore assume the complete physical equivalence of a gravitational field and the corresponding acceleration of the reference frame. This assumption extends the principle of relativity to the case of uniformly accelerated motion of the reference frame.

In other words, he postulated that no experiment can locally distinguish between a uniform gravitational field and a uniform acceleration.

This principle explains the experimental observation that inertial and gravitational mass are equivalent. Moreover, the principle implies that some frames of reference must obey a non-Euclidean geometry: that spacetime is curved (by matter and energy), and gravity can be seen purely as a result of this geometry. This then yields many predictions such as gravitational redshifts and light bent around stars, black holes, time slowed by gravitational fields, and slightly modified laws of gravitation even in weak gravitational fields. However, it should be noted that the equivalence principle does not uniquely determine the field equations of curved spacetime, and there is a parameter known as the cosmological constant which can be adjusted.

The modifications to Isaac Newton's law of universal gravitation produced the first great theoretical success of general relativity: the correct prediction of the precession of the perihelion of Mercury's orbit. Many other quantitative predictions of general relativity have since been confirmed by astronomical observations. However because of the difficulty in making these observations, theories which are similar but not identical to general relativity, such as the Brans-Dicke theoryBrans-Dicke theory is an extension to Einstein's theory of general relativity. In addition to the metric, , it introduces a long range scalar field, , which acts as the gravitational constant. The difference is that the gravitational "constant" is now a f and the Rosen bi-metric theory can not be ruled out completely, and current experimental tests can be viewed at reducing the deviation from GR which is allowable. There are no known experimental results that suggest that a theory of gravity radically different from general relativity is necessary. (For example, the Allais effectThe Allais effect describes an increase in the period of a moving pendulum during a solar eclipse, and was initially speculated to be unexplained by standard physical models of gravitation. It was first reported in 1954 by Maurice Allais, a French economi was initially speculated to demonstrate "gravitational shielding," but was subsequently explained by conventional phenomena.)

However, there are good theoretical reasons for considering general relativity to be incomplete. General relativity does not include quantum mechanicswavefunctions of an electron in a hydrogen atom possessing definite energy (increasing downward: n 1,2,3,. and angular momentum (increasing across: s p d . Brighter areas correspond to higher probability density for a position measurement. The angular mom, and this causes the theory to break down at sufficiently high energies. A continuing unsolved challenge of modern physics is the question of how to correctly combine general relativity with quantum mechanicswavefunctions of an electron in a hydrogen atom possessing definite energy (increasing downward: n 1,2,3,. and angular momentum (increasing across: s p d . Brighter areas correspond to higher probability density for a position measurement. The angular mom, thus applying it also to the smallest scales of time and space.



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