Gravitation and Experiment
Abstract
The confrontation between Einstein's gravitation theory and experimental results, notably binary pulsar data, is summarized and its significance discussed. Experiment and theory agree at the 10^{-3} level. All the basic structures of Einstein's theory (coupling of gravity to matter; propagation and self-interaction of the gravitational field, including in strong-field conditions) have been verified. However, some recent theoretical findings (cosmological relaxation toward zero scalar couplings) suggest that the present agreement between Einstein's theory and experiment might be naturally compatible with the existence of a long-range scalar contribution to gravity (such as the dilaton, or a moduli field of string theory). This provides a new theoretical paradigm, and new motivations for improving the experimental tests of gravity. Ultra-high precision tests of the Equivalence Principle appear as the most sensitive way to look for possible long-range deviations from General Relativity: they might open a low-energy window on string-scale physics.
Cite
@article{arxiv.gr-qc/9711061,
title = {Gravitation and Experiment},
author = {Thibault Damour},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:gr-qc/9711061},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
23 pages, Latex, psfig, 2 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of Princeton's 250th Anniversary Conference on Critical Problems in Physics (October 31-November 2, 1996) to be published by Princeton University Press (1997)