Putting the General Theory of Relativity to the test gives us a chance to look once again at Einstein’s understanding of gravity to see how it conforms with reality. We know the theory is incomplete because it doesn’t tell us what happens to gravity at the subatomic level. But on the macro-scale of the larger universe, General Relativity is again confirmed in new work involving an unusual pair of neutron stars.

The work, performed by an international team using the Jodrell Bank telescope in Cheshire and the Green Bank instrument in West Virginia, examined two pulsars that orbit each other, the only known case out of some 1700 identified pulsars where two are found in such a configuration. Emitting beams of radio waves, the two stars offer another observational opportunity — their orbital plane lines up nearly with their line of sight to Earth. The result: An eclipsing signal as one pulsar moves behind the ionized gas surrounding the other. The fortuitious lineup makes possible an extremely accurate measurement.

Binary pulsars test Einstein

Victoria Kaspi (McGill University) calls this system “…precisely the kind of extreme ‘cosmic laboratory’ needed to test Einstein’s prediction.” Extreme is an understatement — we’re talking about the shattered remains of massive stars, objects the size of Cleveland that stream radio waves from the poles of their intense magnetic fields, recorded from our vantage as stuttering signals that match a rotation of up to hundreds of times a second.

Image: The illustration shows the two pulsars which orbit the common centre of mass in only 144 minutes. The system was discovered by astronomers from the University of Manchester as part of an international team in 2003 and it is the eclipses observed in this system that have lead to this study. Credit: Michael Kramer, University of Manchester.

Einstein’s theory tells us that when two massive objects are paired in a close system like this, the gravitational pull of one should cause the spin axis of the other to wobble. Earlier studies have demonstrated the effects of such wobbling (precession), but relativistic effects become more significant the larger and closer the objects under investigation are, making this the most accurate measurement of its magnitude. Changes to the spin axis of these pulsars appeared as changes to the signal blockages during the eclipse events, offering an exquisitely precise check on General Relativity’s predictions.

Says René Breton (McGill University):

“Pulsars are too small and too distant to allow us to observe this wobble directly, However, as they orbit each other every 145 minutes, each passes in front of the other and the astronomers soon realized they could measure the direction of the pulsar’s spin axis as the highly magnetized region surrounding it blocks the radio waves being emitted from the other. After patiently collecting the radio pulses over the past four years, they have now determined that its spin axis precesses exactly as Einstein predicted.”

Both Jodrell Bank and Green Bank are storied sites in the history of astronomy. Have the two observatories now confirmed General Relativity beyond all question? The answer is that again and again, Einstein’s work holds up to the tests being thrown at it. Both Newton and Einstein ‘work,’ but Einstein works better in a larger range of environments. And just as Einstein significantly extended Newton (making sense, for example, of anomalies in the Newtonian explanation for Mercury’s orbit), so we push on today to extend Einstein’s theory into the quantum realm, a search that is one of the most significant in modern physics.