Discover
/
Article

Radio‐wave deflection experiments confirm Einstein

APR 01, 1975
Marian S. Rothenberg

Einstein yes, Brans–Dicke no, is the apparent verdict of some recent experiments at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Green Bank, West Virginia. Edward Fomalont and Richard Sramek measured the deflection of microwave radiation by the Sun’s gravitational field and report results sufficiently precise that they are consistent with Einstein’s general relativity but not with scalar–tensor formulations such as Brans–Dicke theory. The remaining uncertainty concerns possible systematic errors in these observations, not the formal statistical error, which appears to be sufficiently small. The experimenters used a 35‐km baseline radio interferometer to study three nearly collinear radio sources at two frequencies and found the bending to be 1.015±0.011 times that predicted by general relativity; the Brans–Dicke prediction differs by about seven percent.

This article is only available in PDF format

Related content
/
Article
In noisy biological environments, the fluorescent protein can pinpoint subcellular structures and detect magnetic field changes.
/
Article
Two cylinders rotating in a fluid can mimic the behavior of gears and of a belt-and-pulley system.
/
Article
/
Article
Born out of a time of great need for the federal government, NCAR plays a role with few analogues.

Get PT in your inbox

pt_newsletter_card_blue.png
PT The Week in Physics

A collection of PT's content from the previous week delivered every Monday.

pt_newsletter_card_darkblue.png
PT New Issue Alert

Be notified about the new issue with links to highlights and the full TOC.

pt_newsletter_card_pink.png
PT Webinars & White Papers

The latest webinars, white papers and other informational resources.

By signing up you agree to allow AIP to send you email newsletters. You further agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.