
Strong Gravity research at Perimeter Institute is devoted to understanding both the theoretical and observational aspects of systems in which gravity is very strong (i.e., spacetime is highly curved or dynamical],. On one hand, this means studying extreme astrophysical systems, like black holes and neutron stars, as well as making and testing predictions for existing and forthcoming gravitational wave detectors, electromagnetic telescopes, and particle astrophysics experiments. On the other hand, it also includes a range of non-astrophysical topics, such as the instabilities of higher-dimensional black holes or the dynamics of strongly-coupled quantum field theories (via holography).
The goal of strong gravity researcher is to test the validity of Einstein's theory of gravity, constrain proposed alternatives, understand the most extreme astrophysical systems, and investigate the ways in which highly curved or dynamical spacetimes are linked with a range of other problems in fundamental physics.
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GRAVITY - Exploring Physics Close to the Galactic Center Black Hole with Infrared Interferometry
Stefan Gillessen Max Planck Institute for Physics, Munich (Werner-Heisenberg-Institut)
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Gas Dynamical Black Hole Mass Measurements for M87
Jonelle Walsh The University of Texas at Austin
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Detecting gravitational waves from supermassive binary black holes with pulsar timing
Xavier Siemens Oregon State University
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Advanced LIGO status and prospects to probe the strong gravity regime
Gabriela Gonzalez Louisiana State University
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Event-horizon-scale structure of M87 in the middle of the VHE enhancement in 2012
Kazunori Akiyama Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
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EHT Constraints on Jet Launching in M87
Avery Broderick University of Waterloo
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New Results from Global Millimeter VLBI observations – How small an AGN can be?
Thomas Krichbaum Max Planck Institute for Astronomy