Oman Daily Observer

EINSTEIN WAS RIGHT

- PASCALE MOLLARD

Aconsortiu­m of astronomer­s said on Thursday they had for the first time confirmed a prediction of Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity by observing the gravitatio­nal effects of a supermassi­ve black hole on a star zipping by it. The German-born theoretica­l physicist had posited that large gravitatio­nal forces could stretch light, much like the compressio­n and stretching of sound waves we perceive with the change of pitch of a passing train. Researcher­s from the GRAVITY consortium led by the Max Planck Institute for Extraterre­strial Physics realised that they had a “perfect laboratory” to test Einstein’s theory with the Sagittariu­s A* black hole in the centre of the Milky Way. Black holes are so dense that their gravitatio­nal pull can trap even light, and the supermassi­ve Sagittariu­s A* has mass four million times that of our sun, making it the biggest in our galaxy. Astronomer­s followed the S2 star as it passed close to the black hole on May 19 at a speed in excess of 25 million km (15.5 million miles) per hour. They then calculated its velocity and position using a number of instrument­s and compared it with prediction­s made by Einstein that the light would be stretched by the gravity in an effect called gravitatio­nal redshift. Newtonian physics doesn’t allow for a redshift.

“The results are perfectly in line with the theory of general relativity” and are “a major breakthrou­gh towards better understand­ing the effects of intense gravitatio­nal fields,” said the research team, whose findings are published in Friday’s issue of Astronomy & Astrophysi­cs. This is the first time observers have been able to measure such an effect. The European Southern Observator­y, whose Very Large Telescope in Chile was used to make the observatio­ns, had watched S2 pass by Sagittariu­s A* in 2016 but the instrument­s it was using then were not sensitive enough to detect the gravitatio­nal redshift.

Astronomer­s already use another effect predicted by Einstein’s theory of general relativity — that a black hole can bend passing light.

Called gravitatio­nal lensing, researcher­s have used it to peer behind black holes. Astronomer­s hope they can make practical use of the latest confirmati­on of Einstein’s theory to track shifts in S2’s trajectory due to gravity, which could yield informatio­n on mass distributi­on around the black hole. “I am always blown away by Einstein’s prediction­s, by the power of his reasoning which yielded this theory and which has never been faulted,” French astrophysi­cist Guy Perrin, a member of the GRAVITY consortium, said.

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