Relativity
- 101
- Olinto De Pretto
- Wikipedia article about the Italian industrialist and claims that he published the famous formula E=mc² two years before Einstein did.
- 102
- Relativity Priority Dispute
- Wikipedia article about the various contributors to special and general relativity, and about the contentious questions of who has priority on the different ideas and concepts involved, and in how far Einstein was influenced by his contemporaries and predecessors.
- 103
- Scott Walter's Homepage
- Contains articles of the historian of science Scott Walter (Université de Nancy 2), including those on the history of special relativity, with a special focus on contributors other than Einstein (such as Poincaré, and Minkowski). [PDF]
- 104
- General Relativity and Gravitation
- Journal published by Springer, devoted to articles on general relativity and its applications.
- 105
- Bondi, Hermann (1919-2005)
- Biography of the Austrian-born, British cosmologist whose name is associated with steady-state cosmology, Tolman-Bondi solutions, accretion onto black hole, and the k-calculus; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 106
- Carter, Brandon (1942-)
- Wikipedia article about the Australian physicist, one of the pioneers of black hole mechanics.
- 107
- Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan (1910-1995)
- Biographical sketch of the Indian astrophysicist who was the first to model stellar stability using both relativity and quantum theory; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 108
- De Sitter, Willem (1872-1934)
- Brief biography of the Dutch astronomer who was one of the first to think about the theory's cosmological applications (de Sitter space); from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 109
- Dicke, Robert H. (1916-1997)
- Wikipedia article about the American physicist who was involved in a number of observational tests of general relativity and who developed a generalization of Einstein's theory (Jordan-Brans-Dicke theory).
- 110
- Eddington, Arthur (1882-1944)
- Biographical sketch of the English astrophysicist who performed the first observational test of the gravitational bending of light near the Sun; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 111
- FitzGerald, George (1851-1901)
- Biographical sketch of the physicist who postulated relativistic length contraction before the publication of Einstein's special relativity; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 112
- Freundlich, Erwin (1885-1964)
- Biographical sketch of the German astronomer who worked with Einstein on the question of how to test the predictions of general relativity using astronomical observations; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 113
- Friedmann, Aleksandr (1888-1925)
- Brief biography of the Russian mathematician who found the first expanding-universe cosmological solution of Einstein's equations; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 114
- Grossmann, Marcel (1878-1936)
- A brief biography the mathematician who, as his fellow student and friend, helped Einstein to understand the mathematical tools (mostly differential geometry) needed to formulate general relativity; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 115
- Hilbert, David (1862-1943)
- Biographical sketch of the German mathematician who wrote down the first action principle for Einstein's general theory of relativity; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 116
- Hoyle, Fred (1915-2001)
- Biographical sketch of the physicist who contributed both to the steady-state models of cosmology and to calculations of the creation of light elements in the hot early universe; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).
- 117
- Israel, Werner (1931-)
- Wikipedia article about the Canadian physicist, one of the pioneers of research on black holes (uniqueness theorems).
- 118
- Kaluza, Theodor (1885-1954)
- Biography of the German mathematician who was the first to introduce a higher-dimensional version of general relativity in an attempt to unify gravity and electrodynamics; from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive (University of St. Andrews).