Jonathan Scott
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I just saw that physicist Kenneth Nordtvedt died on October 9th, according to his Wikipedia entry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Nordtvedt
He had a fluent grasp of relativistic gravity theories, and is particularly known for using the Lunar Laser Ranging to check the equivalence principle in a way which is now known as the Nordtvedt effect, eliminating some alternative theories to General Relativity. I also appreciated his paper on varieties of frame-dragging, both rotational and linear.
He was later known as a genetic genealogist.
I'm surprised that the only news about it or obituary I can find is in a local paper for his Bozeman address which requires a subscription.
A few years ago I asked him a question about the effect of unbalanced pressure as a gravitational source in a spherically symmetrical system (for example a star which is oscillating between different sizes) and how this could be consistent with Birkhoff's theorem, and he both gave me a very helpful quick summary in terms I could understand and pointed me to a relevant paper he wrote in 1968. And the only reason I discovered his death is that I was thinking of asking him another GR question, then saw the Wikipedia entry. I will certainly miss him.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Nordtvedt
He had a fluent grasp of relativistic gravity theories, and is particularly known for using the Lunar Laser Ranging to check the equivalence principle in a way which is now known as the Nordtvedt effect, eliminating some alternative theories to General Relativity. I also appreciated his paper on varieties of frame-dragging, both rotational and linear.
He was later known as a genetic genealogist.
I'm surprised that the only news about it or obituary I can find is in a local paper for his Bozeman address which requires a subscription.
A few years ago I asked him a question about the effect of unbalanced pressure as a gravitational source in a spherically symmetrical system (for example a star which is oscillating between different sizes) and how this could be consistent with Birkhoff's theorem, and he both gave me a very helpful quick summary in terms I could understand and pointed me to a relevant paper he wrote in 1968. And the only reason I discovered his death is that I was thinking of asking him another GR question, then saw the Wikipedia entry. I will certainly miss him.