2021
December
23
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 23, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

The future of the universe depends on proving Albert Einstein wrong – or at least our understanding of it does, it seems. 

Last week, the scientific journal Physical Review X released the most stringent test yet of Einstein’s theory of general relativity (think E=mc2). It involved seeing how the gravity of two pulsars – superdense star remnants more massive than the sun but only about 15 miles wide – warped space-time around them, slowing time and bending light. (Spoiler: Everything did exactly what Einstein predicted it would.)

Why, you may ask, are scientists still testing general relativity 106 years after Einstein posited it, especially considering it has passed every single test? The problem is, Einstein’s theory explains how matter behaves on the largest gravitational scales – around black holes and pulsars, for example. But it is completely incompatible with the science that explains how matter behaves on the smallest, quantum scales. You can’t have two contradictory laws to the universe, can you?

That is where we currently are, so in the quest to find a “law of everything,” scientists are training their fire on Einstein. “Finding any deviation from general relativity would constitute a major discovery that would open a window on new physics beyond our current theoretical understanding of the universe,” one of the study’s authors said in a statement. “And it may help us toward eventually discovering a unified theory of the fundamental forces of nature.”  

The lesson from the latest study: Don’t expect Einstein to give up the fight easily.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Brittainy Newman/AP
New York Mayor-elect Eric Adams speaks during a news conference at the Queensbridge houses in Long Island City in Queens, on Dec. 15, 2021. The former police officer and state senator takes office on Jan. 1.

Finding Resilience

Ann Hermes/Staff
Ciere Boatright, then vice president of real estate and inclusion at Chicago Neighborhood Initiatives, stands in front of developments in the Pullman neighborhood on July 30, 2021. With input from community residents, CNI has been pushing to attract investment, jobs, and retail stores to the area.
Menelik Puryear/Courtesy of Yla Eason
Olmec Toys founder Yla Eason teaches marketing at Rutgers Business School. "If you want to make money and do good, you start with people first," she says.

Essay

Linda Bleck

In Pictures

Ann Hermes/Staff
Spectators watch at twilight as over 500 tethered balloons light up simultaneously at the Balloon Glow during the 49th Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta on Oct. 3 in New Mexico.

A year of resilience: Monitor photographers at work in 2021


The Monitor's View

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People ice skate around the Christmas tree at the Natural History Museum in London in December 2021.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature
Photo illustration by Vladimir Serov/Getty Images

A message of love

Sichuan Daily/news aktuell/AP
Giant pandas at the Daxiangling Releasing Base in China's Sichuan province frolic in the snow, in an image released Dec. 23, 2021. The base provides rewilding training and large adaptation areas for the pandas.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Watch for an email tomorrow carrying an animated feature built to bring joy on Christmas Eve. We’ll also include a preview about a series of holiday audio specials that we’ll be sharing all next week. Your next regular Daily will appear on Monday, Jan. 3.

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