Event

Dec 10, 2018
Schwarzschild Gravitational Field and Collapsed Stars

J.R. Oppenheimer and H. Snyder’s 1939 paper On Continued Gravitational Contraction  is widely celebrated as pioneering on the history of black holes, with a thorough description of a gravitational collapse, including the loss of communication characteristic of the modern concept of black holes. This presentation is a historical reassessment of this status, considering Oppenheimer and Snyder’s influences, the novelty in their thinking, and the later impact of their work, focusing on the contribution given by cosmologists and relativists, and how the understanding of Schwarzschild gravitational field helped on the acceptance of the idea of gravitational collapse.

Address
MPIWG, Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, Germany
Room
Villa, Room V005/Seminar Room
Contact and Registration

No registration necessary

About This Series

The seminar series of the Research Group “Historical Epistemology of the Final Theory Program” runs once a month, usually on a Monday at 14:30 in the seminar room of the Villa (Harnackstraße 5). The talks deal primarily with the history, philosophy, and foundations of modern (post-WWII) physics or with wider epistemological questions related to the work of the group. There are no pre-circulated papers.

2018-12-10T14:00:00SAVE IN I-CAL 2018-12-10 14:00:00 2018-12-10 16:00:00 Schwarzschild Gravitational Field and Collapsed Stars J.R. Oppenheimer and H. Snyder’s 1939 paper On Continued Gravitational Contraction  is widely celebrated as pioneering on the history of black holes, with a thorough description of a gravitational collapse, including the loss of communication characteristic of the modern concept of black holes. This presentation is a historical reassessment of this status, considering Oppenheimer and Snyder’s influences, the novelty in their thinking, and the later impact of their work, focusing on the contribution given by cosmologists and relativists, and how the understanding of Schwarzschild gravitational field helped on the acceptance of the idea of gravitational collapse. MPIWG, Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, Germany Villa, Room V005/Seminar Room Alexander Blum Alexander Blum Europe/Berlin public