10 episodes

The Fall 2012 quarter of the Modern Physics series concentrates on Einstein’s theory of gravity and geometry: the General Theory of Relativity. Beginning with the basic ideas of Riemannian and curved space, and Minkowski’s “space-time,” we learn about Einstein’s discovery of how gravity is really the curvature of space-time. We also cover the theory of black holes and their strangely paradoxical properties. The final weeks of the course develop the essential ideas of Big Bang cosmology.

Modern Physics: General Theory of Relativity (Fall 2012‪)‬ Stanford Continuing Studies

    • Science

The Fall 2012 quarter of the Modern Physics series concentrates on Einstein’s theory of gravity and geometry: the General Theory of Relativity. Beginning with the basic ideas of Riemannian and curved space, and Minkowski’s “space-time,” we learn about Einstein’s discovery of how gravity is really the curvature of space-time. We also cover the theory of black holes and their strangely paradoxical properties. The final weeks of the course develop the essential ideas of Big Bang cosmology.

    • video
    10. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 10 (December 3, 2012)

    10. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 10 (December 3, 2012)

    Leonard Susskind demonstrates that Einstein's field equations become wave equations in the approximation of weak gravitational fields. The solutions for these equations create the theory of gravity waves. (December 3, 2012)

    • video
    9. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 9 (November 26, 2012)

    9. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 9 (November 26, 2012)

    Leonard Susskind derives the Einstein field equations of general relativity and demonstrates how they equate spacetime curvature as expressed by the Einstein tensor, with the energy and momentum within that spacetime as expressed by the stress–energy tensor. (November 26, 2012)

    • video
    8. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 8 (November 12, 2012)

    8. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 8 (November 12, 2012)

    Leonard Susskind develops the coordinate transformations used to create Penrose diagrams, and then uses them to describe the physics of black hole creation. (November 12, 2012)

    • video
    7. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 7 (November 5, 2012)

    7. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 7 (November 5, 2012)

    Leonard Susskind continues the discussion of black holes in depth using coordinate transformations and diagrams to develop an intuitive understanding of black hole physics. (November 5, 2012)

    • video
    6. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 6 (October 29, 2012)

    6. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 6 (October 29, 2012)

    Leonard Susskind presents the physics of black holes including the event horizon, the photon sphere, and the singularity. (October 29, 2012)

    • video
    5. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 5 (October 22, 2012)

    5. General Theory of Relativity Lecture 5 (October 22, 2012)

    Leonard Susskind derives the spacetime metric for a gravitational field, and introduces the relativistic mathematics that describe a black hole. (October 22, 2012)

Top Podcasts In Science

24 spørgsmål til professoren
Weekendavisen
Plantejagten
Plantejagten
10 formler, der forandrede verden
DM Akademikerbladet
Videnskab fra vilde hjerner
Niels Bohr Institutet · Københavns Universitet
Hva så?! forklarer alt
Christian Fuhlendorff
KRANIEBRUD
Radio4

You Might Also Like

Why This Universe?
Dan Hooper, Shalma Wegsman
Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe
iHeartPodcasts
Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas
Sean Carroll | Wondery
The Joy of Why
Steven Strogatz, Janna Levin and Quanta Magazine
The Supermassive Podcast
The Royal Astronomical Society
The Science of Everything Podcast
James Fodor

More by Stanford

Entitled Opinions (about Life and Literature)
Robert Harrison
Modern Physics: Quantum Mechanics (Winter 2012)
Leonard Susskind
Modern Physics: The Theoretical Minimum - Quantum Mechanics
Stanford Continuing Studies Program
The Future of Everything
Stanford Engineering
History of the International System
James Sheehan
Human Behavioral Biology
Robert Sapolsky