Copilot
Your everyday AI companion
  1.  
  1. Examples of general relativity are1234:
    • Black holes, which are regions of space where gravity is so strong that nothing can escape.
    • Gravitational waves, which are ripples in space-time caused by accelerating masses.
    • Gravitational lensing, which is the bending of light by massive objects.
    • Gravitational time dilation, which is the slowing of time near a strong gravitational field.
    • Gravitational redshift, which is the shift of light to lower frequencies near a strong gravitational field.
    • The orbit of Mercury, which deviates from Newtonian predictions due to the curvature of space-time.
    Learn more:
    General relativity describes new phenomena, which the old Newtonian law of gravity could not predict: examples of this are black holes (in principle, Newtonian gravity can predict they exist, but not describe them to the extent of GR) and gravitational waves (this is a totally unique phenomenon to GR).
    profoundphysics.com/general-relativity-for-dummies/
    Einstein made a series of predictions using General Relativity. For example, using his theory, he explained why Mercury’s orbit drifts – because of this distortion of space-time.
    scienceissimple.com/general-relativity/
    Gravitational time dilation, gravitational lensing, the gravitational redshift of light, gravitational time delay, and singularities/black holes are examples of such differences.
    www.vedantu.com/physics/general-relativity
    General relativity has been experimentally verified by observations of gravitational lenses, the orbit of the planet Mercury, the dilation of time in Earth ’s gravitational field, and gravitational waves from merging black holes.
    www.britannica.com/science/general-relativity
  2. People also ask
  3. Physics of the Cosmos (PhysCOS) - NASA

  4. WEB3 days ago · In general relativity, gravitational forces between two massive bodies like planets or stars are due to the curvature of spacetime, which itself is caused by the presence of massive bodies.