Follow this link to go to the text only version of nasa.gov
NASA -National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Follow this link to skip to the main content
+ Text Only Site
+ Site Help & Preferences
Go
ABOUT NASALATEST NEWSMULTIMEDIAMISSIONSMyNASAWORK FOR NASA

+ NASA Home
+ MSFC Home
Marshall Space Flight Center
MARSHALL HOME
ABOUT MARSHALL
MICHOUD ASSEMBLY FACILITY
MARSHALL NEWS
MULTIMEDIA
MISSIONS
MARSHALL EVENTS
EDUCATION
DOING BUSINESS WITH US
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
SPACE SHUTTLE PROPULSION
SPACE SYSTEMS
SPACE TRANSPORTATION
SAFETY
Go
+ NASA Home > Centers > Marshall Home > Marshall News > News Releases > 2004
Print ThisPrint This
Email ThisEmail This

NASA NEWS
Link to Marshall Newsroom home page

For release: 09-29-04
Release #: 04-241  

Testing Einstein's theory: Athens, Ala., native plays role in NASA Gravity Probe B mission

Photo description: Burns

As a major NASA mission begins science operations, native DeWitt Burns can make a rare claim — that he helped test Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.

Photo: Burns (NASA/MSFC)


As a major NASA mission begins science operations, Athens, Ala., native DeWitt Burns can make a rare claim -- that he helped test Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.

Burns, a lifelong Athens resident and 1978 graduate of Athens High School, is a member of NASA's Gravity Probe B team. Also known as GP-B, the experiment will test Einstein's theory that space and time are slightly distorted by the presence of massive objects such as planets and stars.

As materials contamination team lead for Gravity Probe B's Materials, Processes and Manufacturing Department at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., Burns evaluated contamination-control measures to help protect the spacecraft. Also, as a member of the gas management assembly redesign team, he played a role in the design, fabrication, testing and integration of hardware that provides spin-up gas to Gravity Probe B's gyroscopes.

Gravity Probe B launched April 20 from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., aboard a Boeing Delta II launch vehicle. Orbiting 400 miles above Earth, the Gravity Probe B space vehicle circles the globe every 90 minutes, crossing over both poles.

While on orbit, Gravity Probe B's four ultra-precise gyroscopes will monitor their alignment changes in relation to the mission's guide star, IM Pegasus. One of the anticipated changes is only 42 milliarcseconds after one year, an angle so small that if someone climbed a slope of 42 milliarcseconds for 100 miles, their altitude would be only one inch higher than when they started.

These measurements will enable scientists to track two effects — how space and time are very slightly warped by the presence of the Earth, and how the Earth's rotation very slightly drags space-time around with it.

Considered among the most profound enigmas of physics, these factors have far-reaching implications for the nature of matter and the structure of the universe. Einstein proposed the General Theory of Relativity in 1916, approximately 80 years before the advent of technology capable of testing his theory.

Gravity Probe B's 12-month science-data acquisition period will be followed by a two-month post-science period for calibrations. By 2005 the Gravity Probe B mission will be complete, and a one-year period is planned for scientific analysis of the data.

Burns has a bachelor's degree in engineering from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.

NASA's Gravity Probe B program is managed at the Marshall Space Flight Center. NASA's prime contractor for the mission, Stanford University in Stanford, Calif., conceived the experiment and is responsible for the design of the science instrument, as well as for mission operations and data analysis. A major subcontractor, Lockheed Martin of Sunnyvale, Calif., designed and built the spacecraft as well as portions of the science instrument.

More information about the Gravity Probe B mission is available at:

http://einstein.stanford.edu/

and

http://www.gravityprobeb.com

For more information:
New flagNews release
New flagPhotos


Contact
Steve Roy
Public Affairs Office
(256) 544-0034

Graphic for line

E-mail

Get releases sent directly to you!
Contact:
Betty Humphery

Graphic for line



+ Back to Top



+ Freedom of Information Act
+ Budgets, Strategic Plans and Accountability Reports
+ The President's Management Agenda
+ Privacy Policy and Important Notices
+ Inspector General Hotline
+ Equal Employment Opportunity Data Posted Pursuant to the No Fear Act
+ Information-Dissemination Priorities and Inventories
+ USA.gov
+ ExpectMore.gov
NASA
Editor: Brooke Boen
NASA Official: Brian Dunbar
Last Updated: September 17, 2007
+ Contact Marshall
+ SiteMap