4.7 Article

Strong-Field Gravity Tests with the Double Pulsar

期刊

PHYSICAL REVIEW X
卷 11, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevX.11.041050

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资金

  1. Commonwealth of Australia [421683]
  2. Netherlands Foundation for Scientific Research (NWO)
  3. Science and Technology Facilities Council in the United Kingdom
  4. Action Federatrice PhyFOG - Paris Observatory
  5. Programme National Gravitation, References, Astronomie, Metrologie (PNGRAM) - CNRS/INSU
  6. CNES, France
  7. NSERC Discovery Grant
  8. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research
  9. CITA Postdoctoral Fellowship
  10. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [CITA 490888-16]
  11. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT150100415]
  12. NSF [AAG-1616042, OIA-1458952]
  13. European Research Council, under the European Unions [279702]
  14. Max Planck Society
  15. European Research Council [610058]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Continued timing observations of the double pulsar PSR J0737-3039A/B have led to significant improvements in measuring relativistic effects, with new effects observed for the first time. The precision tests of gravity theories and validation of general relativity's predictions have been achieved at a level of 1.3 x 10(-4) with 95% confidence, demonstrating the utility of the double pulsar for alternative theories of gravity tests. The implications of the findings for neutron stars, gravitational waves, interstellar medium, and formation models of double pulsar systems have also been discussed.
Continued timing observations of the double pulsar PSR J0737-3039A/B, which consists of two active radio pulsars (A and B) that orbit each other with a period of 2.45 h in a mildly eccentric (e = 0.088) binary system, have led to large improvements in the measurement of relativistic effects in this system. With a 16-yr data span, the results enable precision tests of theories of gravity for strongly self-gravitating bodies and also reveal new relativistic effects that have been expected but are now observed for the first time. These include effects of light propagation in strong gravitational fields which are currently not testable by any other method. In particular, we observe the effects of retardation and aberrational light bending that allow determination of the spin direction of the pulsar. In total, we detect seven post-Keplerian parameters in this system, more than for any other known binary pulsar. For some of these effects, the measurement precision is now so high that for the first time we have to take higher-order contributions into account. These include the contribution of the A pulsar's effective mass loss (due to spin-down) to the observed orbital period decay, a relativistic deformation of the orbit, and the effects of the equation of state of superdense matter on the observed post-Keplerian parameters via relativistic spin-orbit coupling. We discuss the implications of our findings, including those for the moment of inertia of neutron stars, and present the currently most precise test of general relativity's quadrupolar description of gravitational waves, validating the prediction of general relativity at a level of 1.3 x 10(-4) with 95% confidence. We demonstrate the utility of the double pulsar for tests of alternative theories of gravity by focusing on two specific examples and also discuss some implications of the observations for studies of the interstellar medium and models for the formation of the double pulsar system. Finally, we provide context to other types of related experiments and prospects for the future.

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