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 times that predicted by general relativity; the Brans–Dicke prediction differs by about seven percent.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
April 1975
April 01 1975
Radio‐wave deflection experiments confirm Einstein
Physics Today 28 (4), 17–20 (1975);
Citation
Marian S. Rothenberg; Radio‐wave deflection experiments confirm Einstein. Physics Today 1 April 1975; 28 (4): 17–20. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3068914
Download citation file:
PERSONAL SUBSCRIPTION
Purchase an annual subscription for $25. A subscription grants you access to all of Physics Today's current and backfile content.
Sign In
You could not be signed in. Please check your credentials and make sure you have an active account and try again.
10
Views
Citing articles via
France’s Oppenheimer
William Sweet
Making qubits from magnetic molecules
Stephen Hill
Learning to see gravitational lenses
Sebastian Fernandez-Mulligan