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.
Format results
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Welcome to Perimeter Institute and the EHT 2014 Conference
University of Edinburgh -
PHYS 781 - Lecture 16
University of Waterloo -
PHYS 781 - Lecture 15
University of Waterloo -
PHYS 781 - Lecture 14
University of Waterloo -
Spinning Black Holes and the Membrane Paradigm
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) -
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Force-Free Electrodynamics around Extreme Kerr Black Holes
Utah State University -
A mechanism for vortex annihilation in two dimensional superfluid turbulence
University of Colorado Boulder -
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Black holes without Lorentz symmetry
University of Nottingham