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Stellar Mass Black Holes

By Charles Bailyn - Yale
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Lecture Description

One last key concept in Special Relativity is introduced before discussion turns again to black celestial bodies (black holes in particular) that manifest the relativistic effects students have learned about in the previous lectures. The new concept deals with describing events in a coordinate system of space and time. A mathematical explanation is given for how space and time reverse inside the Schwarzschild radius through sign changes in the metric. Evidence for General Relativity is offered from astronomical objects. The predicted presence and subsequent discovery of Neptune as proof of General Relativity are discussed, and stellar mass black holes are introduced.

Course Description

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Course Index

  1. Introduction to Introduction to Astrophysics
  2. Planetary Orbits
  3. Our Solar System and the Pluto Problem
  4. Discovering Exoplanets: Hot Jupiters
  5. Planetary Transits
  6. Microlensing, Astrometry and Other Methods
  7. Direct Imaging of Exoplanets
  8. Introduction to Black Holes
  9. Special and General Relativity
  10. Tests of Relativity
  11. Special and General Relativity (cont.)
  12. Stellar Mass Black Holes
  13. Stellar Mass Black Holes (cont.)
  14. Pulsars
  15. Supermassive Black Holes
  16. Hubble's Law and the Big Bang
  17. Hubble's Law and the Big Bang (cont.)
  18. Hubble's Law and the Big Bang (cont.)
  19. Omega and the End of the Universe
  20. Dark Matter
  21. Dark Energy and the Accelerating Universe and the Big Rip
  22. Supernovae
  23. Other Constraints: The Cosmic Microwave Background
  24. The Multiverse and Theories of Everything