# Testing Relativistic Gravity with Radio Pulsars

**Authors:** Norbert Wex

arXiv: 1402.5594 · 2014-04-16

## TL;DR

Radio pulsars have revolutionized tests of relativistic gravity, enabling exploration of strong-field and radiative regimes beyond Solar system constraints, with implications for gravitational physics and future gravitational wave observations.

## Contribution

This paper provides an overview of how radio pulsars are used to test relativistic gravity, highlighting recent advances and their significance for gravitational physics.

## Key findings

- Binary pulsars enable tests of strong-field gravity.
- Pulsar observations constrain deviations from general relativity.
- Implications for gravitational wave astronomy are discussed.

## Abstract

Before the 1970s, precision tests for gravity theories were constrained to the weak gravitational fields of the Solar system. Hence, only the weak-field slow-motion aspects of relativistic celestial mechanics could be investigated. Testing gravity beyond the first post-Newtonian contributions was for a long time out of reach.   The discovery of the first binary pulsar by Russell Hulse and Joseph Taylor in the summer of 1974 initiated a completely new field for testing the relativistic dynamics of gravitationally interacting bodies. For the first time the back reaction of gravitational wave emission on the binary motion could be studied. Furthermore, the Hulse-Taylor pulsar provided the first test bed for the orbital dynamics of strongly self-gravitating bodies.   To date there are a number of pulsars known, which can be utilized for precision test of gravity. Depending on their orbital properties and their companion, these pulsars provide tests for various different aspects of relativistic dynamics. Besides tests of specific gravity theories, like general relativity or scalar-tensor gravity, there are pulsars that allow for generic constraints on potential deviations of gravity from general relativity in the quasi-stationary strong-field and the radiative regime.   This article presents a brief overview of this modern field of relativistic celestial mechanics, reviews some of the highlights of gravity tests with radio pulsars, and discusses their implications for gravitational physics and astronomy, including the upcoming gravitational wave astronomy.

## Full text

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## Figures

22 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1402.5594/full.md

## References

170 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1402.5594/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1402.5594