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This book, written for a general readership, reviews and explains
the three-body problem in historical context reaching to latest
developments in computational physics and gravitation theory. The
three-body problem is one of the oldest problems in science and it
is most relevant even in today's physics and astronomy. The long
history of the problem from Pythagoras to Hawking parallels the
evolution of ideas about our physical universe, with a particular
emphasis on understanding gravity and how it operates between
astronomical bodies. The oldest astronomical three-body problem is
the question how and when the moon and the sun line up with the
earth to produce eclipses. Once the universal gravitation was
discovered by Newton, it became immediately a problem to understand
why these three-bodies form a stable system, in spite of the pull
exerted from one to the other. In fact, it was a big question
whether this system is stable at all in the long run. Leading
mathematicians attacked this problem over more than two centuries
without arriving at a definite answer. The introduction of
computers in the last half-a-century has revolutionized the study;
now many answers have been found while new questions about the
three-body problem have sprung up. One of the most recent
developments has been in the treatment of the problem in Einstein's
General Relativity, the new theory of gravitation which is an
improvement on Newton's theory. Now it is possible to solve the
problem for three black holes and to test one of the most
fundamental theorems of black hole physics, the no-hair theorem,
due to Hawking and his co-workers.
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