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Relativity
The Disputed Center of the Universe
An ancient struggle to exalt the earth
Einstein's Point of View
The struggle lost, Einstein pushes further
The Moving Point of View
Where "now" depends on how fast you're moving
Curving Space and Time
Warping slices of reality
Geodesics
The straightest lines in curved space
The Warped Point of View
Where "now" depends on how heavy you are
Compact objects
White Dwarfs
The Oldest and Coldest of Stars
Neutron Stars and Pulsars
The Beacons of the Universe
Black Holes
The Very End of Space and Time
Gravitational-wave astronomy
Gravitational Waves
Ripples in the fabric of spacetime
Sources of Gravitational Waves
Stirring up the ripples
Compact Binaries
Pairs of dead stars locked in a mad, whirling dance
Extreme Mass-Ratio Inspirals
An Elegant Pas de Deux
Collapsing Stars and Supernovae
The Death Throes of Stars
Black Holes and Neutron Stars
Matter meets vacuum in a most dramatic fashion
The First Moments
The birth of the universe: the most violent explosion ever
Exotic Possibilities
Objects that physicists are just beginning to imagine
The Unknown
Unimagined marvels await
A Totally New Kind of Astronomy
A different perspective on the universe
A Totally New Kind of Observatory
Measuring the tiniest of fluctuations in spacetime
Needles in the Haystack
Hearing the cosmic symphony
Numerical relativity
Einstein's Equations
Describing How Mass Warps Spacetime
Why Numerical Relativity?
Calculating Physics
Computer Simulations
Giving the Problem to a Computer
Gravitational Lensing
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Our Motivation Members of the SXS collaboration Our Institutions Code of Conduct About This Site
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Waveform Catalog Surrogate Waveforms SXS Papers SpEC: Spectral Einstein Code
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About SXS

  1. Our Motivation
  2. Members of the SXS collaboration
  3. Our Institutions
  4. Code of Conduct
  5. About This Site
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Four Areas of Science

Relativity Compact Objects Gravitational Wave Astronomy Numerical Relativity

Inspiration

Go, wond'rous creature!
Mount where Science guides,
Go, measure earth, weigh air,
    and state the tides;
Instruct the planets in
    what orbs to run,
Correct old Time,
    and regulate the Sun.

An Essay on Man

About SXS

The SXS project is a collaborative research effort involving multiple institutions. Our goal is the simulation of black holes and other extreme spacetimes to gain a better understanding of Relativity, and the physics of exotic objects in the distant cosmos.

The SXS project is supported by the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, Max Planck Society, NASA, the National Science Foundation, and XSEDE.

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