How the green light was given for gravitational wave search
C Denson Hill, Pawel Nurowski

TL;DR
This paper recounts the historical and theoretical development that led from Einstein's initial skepticism to the confirmation of gravitational waves by LIGO/VIRGO, emphasizing key breakthroughs in understanding their existence.
Contribution
It highlights the overlooked 1958 Trautman papers that provided the crucial theoretical foundation for gravitational wave detection.
Findings
Confirmation of gravitational waves by LIGO/VIRGO
Theoretical obstacles to gravitational waves were overcome in the 1950s
Trautman's 1958 papers were pivotal in this breakthrough
Abstract
The recent detection of gravitational waves by the LIGO/VIRGO team is an incredibly impressive achievement of experimental physics. It is also a tremendous success of the theory of General Relativity. It confirms the existence of black holes; shows that binary black holes exist; that they may collide and that during the merging process gravitational waves are produced. These are all predictions of General Relativity theory in its fully nonlinear regime. The existence of gravitational waves was predicted by Albert Einstein in 1916 within the framework of linearized Einstein theory. Contrary to common belief, even the very \emph{definition} of a gravitational wave in the fully nonlinear Einstein theory was provided only after Einstein's death. Actually, Einstein had arguments against the existence of nonlinear gravitational waves (they were erroneous but he did not accept this), which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
