, the Hans A. Bethe Professor of Physics in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频, has won the American Physical Society鈥檚 , which recognizes outstanding achievement in gravitational physics.
Teukolsky, who has been a professor at Cornell since 1974, will share the prize with Clifford Will, Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of Florida.
In announcing the prize, the APS said Teukolsky has made 鈥渙utstanding contributions to observational tests of general relativity with theories of gravitational waves, astrophysical black holes and neutron stars.鈥
鈥淚 feel especially honored to receive an award named for Albert Einstein, my scientific hero,鈥 said Teukolsky, also the Robinson Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).
Teukolsky developed an equation during his graduate work at Caltech to describe how a rotating black hole interacts with its environment. Much simpler to solve than expected, the equation has found many applications, including developing waveform models for gravitational wave detectors and studying gravity in higher dimensions.
鈥淪aul, in large measure, unlocked some of the mysteries of black holes,鈥 said , the Edward L. Nichols Professor of Physics and Professor of Astronomy and chair of the physics department. 鈥淚n the 1970s, he developed the mathematical tools needed to understand how black holes respond when they are weakly perturbed, and those tools have been widely used in theoretical physics and astrophysics ever since to understand many aspects of black holes.鈥
Throughout his career, Teukolsky has researched a wide variety of topics in relativistic astrophysics, including: timing models for binary pulsars; the properties of rapidly rotating neutron stars; the possibility of naked singularities; and relativistic star clusters. He is a co-author of the widely used textbooks, 鈥淣umerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific Computing鈥 and 鈥淏lack Holes, White Dwarfs and Neutron Stars: The Physics of Compact Objects.鈥
Teukolsky鈥檚 major current interest is numerical relativity, which involves using super computers to solve Einstein鈥檚 equations. He has introduced new algorithms to the field with the goal of improving the accuracy of predictions for gravitational wave detectors like the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) at Caltech.
Recently, said Flanagan, Teukolsky led a team of physicists that used computer simulations to predict the gravitational waves given off when pairs of black holes collide, and those predictions matched what was seen in the first-ever detection of gravitational waves in 2016.
鈥淭his showed definitively that black holes exist,鈥 Flanagan said, 鈥渁nd behave the way we expect them to.鈥
Teukolsky was elected to the American Academy of Arts and 麻豆视频 in 1996 and the National Academy of 麻豆视频 in 2003.
.