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		Jorge 
		Pullin The graphics from Pullin's 
		talk are here in seven web pages. Click on the indicated subject to go to the relevant 
		page. You can also download a
		PDF version. pg. 1
		Pullin began the workshop with a succinct account of GR.  He 
		pointed participants to more information in
		Wikipedia, noting especially 
		Sean Carroll's
		
		no-nonsense introduction, and then he
		outlined his talk.     pg. 2  He 
		gave a one-slide summary 
		of the special relativity needed to understand general relativity, and 
		then showed the essence of GR:
		gravity is curvature of 
		spacetime and the spacetime 
		interval is the measure of "distance". pg. 3 To describe 
		curved space you need tensors.
		Trajectories are curves 
		parameterized by the proper time, and absent forces, these are straight 
		lines in spacetime. For vector algebra you need a metric; for vector 
		calculus you need the 
		covariant derivative. pg. 4 
		Einstein's equations tell how matter 
		curves spacetime.  The curvature affects physics. You need to know 
		how curvature shows up in the mathematics: 
		Ricci tensor and curvature scalar.  
		Minimal coupling relates physics to curved space; he shows the weak 
		field metric outside a sphere. pg. 5  There are
		singularities in this 
		metric. One is an artifact of choice of coordinates; the other implies 
		there are black holes. In 
		the weak field limit there is an effective potential that accounts for 
		the precession of the perihelion of Mercury.  This effective 
		potential is an 
		"exterior" solution, not valid in close. pg. 6 The weak-field 
		metric implies there should be 
		gravity waves. The possibility of such waves can also be seen by 
		using Kruskal 
		coordinates and obtaining a wave equation. He then uses a Green's 
		function to obtain a 
		solution of this wave equation. pg. 7
		Summary: Gravity is the 
		deformation of geometry; Einstein's equations describe how geometry is 
		deformed; solutions of these equations describe well the effects of weak 
		fields and predict new phenomena for strong fields; the equations have 
		wave-like solutions, but the lowest contribution is quadrupolar.   wiki
   review
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