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Albert Einstein. Photo by Oren Jack Turner, 1947.
Courtesy U.S. Library of Congress, Biographical File: LC-USZ62-60242
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MU
Scientist Measures Speed of Gravity
For the first time, scientists have measured
the speed of gravity, one of the fundamental constants of Albert
Einstein’s 1916 general theory of relativity. Led by Sergei
Kopeikin, a physicist at the University of Missouri-Columbia,
a team of scientists took advantage of a rare cosmic alignment
on Sept. 8 to test Einstein’s assumption that gravity moves
at the speed of light.
“Newton thought that gravity’s
force was instantaneous,” Kopeikin said. “Einstein
assumed that it moved at the speed of light, but until now, no
one had measured it.”
Kopeikin worked with Ed Fomalont, a radio
astronomer with the National Science Foundation’s National
Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in Charlottesville, Va. On
Sept. 8, the scientists measured the shift of a quasar, a celestial
object that resembles a star. Jupiter’s gravitational force
caused the quasar to shift as Jupiter passed by it closely.
“We have determined that gravity’s
propagation speed is equal to the speed of light within an accuracy
of 20 percent,” Fomalont said.
The scientists presented their findings to
the American Astronomical Society's meeting in Seattle, Wash.
The landmark measurement is important to physicists working on
field theories that attempt to combine particle physics with Einstein's
general theory of relativity and electromagnetic theory.

Jupiter and neighboring planets
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To conduct the experiment, the scientists
used the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array
(VLBA), a continent-wide, radio-telescope system, and a 100-meter
radio telescope in Effelsberg, Germany, to make an extremely precise
observation when Jupiter passed in front of the quasar. The observation
recorded a slight “bending” of the radio waves coming
from the quasar because of the gravitational effect of Jupiter.
The bending resulted in a small change in the quasar’s apparent
position in the sky in addition to the deflection of light calculated
by Einstein in 1915.
“Because Jupiter is moving around the
sun, the precise amount of the bending depends slightly on the
speed at which gravity propagates from Jupiter,” Kopeikin
said. “Since the effect is very small, Einstein neglected
it in his calculations.”
In 1999, Kopeikin extended Einstein’s theory for light propagation
to include the gravitational effects of a moving body on light
and radio waves. Prior to this study, no one had tried to measure
the speed of gravity because most physicists had assumed that
the only way to do so was to detect gravitational waves, Kopeikin
said. The MU scientist realized that if Jupiter moved closely
in front of a star or radio source, he could test his theory.
The VBLA system is a result of a general radio
technique known as Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI). “I
believe this experiment sheds new light on fundamentals of general
relativity and represents the first of many more studies and observations
of gravitation available presently with existing VLBI technique,”
Kopeikin said. “We have a lot more to learn about this intriguing
cosmic force and its relationship to the other forces in nature.”
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Last Update:
November 19, 2007
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