constructing images of, 30–31, 75–87, 96–99;
accretion disk, 94–99;
lack of jet, 94;
appearance of, from Miller’s planet, 168–169,
appearance of, from Mann’s planet, 175
appearance of, from inside event horizon,
typical orbits around,
lethality of environment, 100–102
vibrations of, 170–173
volcano analogy, 239–240;
geometrodynamics, 154–155
global positioning system,
GOCE satellite (ESA), 216–217,
GPS, 36–37,
GRACE satellite (NASA),
gravitational anomalies, historical examples:
anomalous precession of Mercury’s orbit, 34, 202–204
anomalous orbits of galaxies around each other—dark matter, 204–206
anomalous acceleration of universe’s expansion—dark energy, 206–207
gravitational anomalies in
origin of the idea for, 5
in Cooper’s landing a Ranger, 208
in GPS system failure, 208
harvesters gone haywire, 208
in the fall of dust, 208,
in tidal gravity (my extrapolation), 209–211,
in the strength of the Earth’s gravity, 216–217
in Gargantua’s vibrations (my extrapolation), 170–173
Professor Brand’s interest in, 212
harnessing of, to lift colonies off Earth, 32, 212, 221, 225, 273–275, 290
generated by bulk fields (my extrapolation), 32–33, 213–218, 296
described by Professor Brand’s equation, 220–222
quantum gravity laws, as key to, 225
gravitational anomalies on Earth:
searches for, 32, 207
could arise from fields controlling gravity’s strength, 296
Brans-Dicke theory predicts, 296
gravitational field and field lines, 25–26;
gravitational lensing:
defined, 30
by dark matter, observed, 205
gravitational lensing by black holes,
shadow’s edge and ring of fire, 76–78
by nonspinning black hole, 79–80
by fast-spinning black hole, 80–86
Einstein rings, 79–82
star-streaming patterns as camera moves around hole, 76, 78–82, 85–86
computation of, for
lensing of one black hole by another black hole, 86–87
gravitational lensing by wormholes,
gravitational slingshots:
NASA’s, in the solar system, 72–74, 117
references on, 279–280
necessary for spacecraft navigation near Gargantua, 67–68
IMBH needed, 69–71
for Ranger’s trip from
for
for
imaged by gravitational lensing, 86–87
in a black-hole binary system, for intergalactic travel, 120–123
video game based on, 280, 295
gravitational waves:
what they are, 146, 151–153
tendex lines, 151–153
role in my extrapolation of
gravitational waveforms, 147–148,
from neutron star spiraling into black hole, 148–149
from merging black holes, 151–152,
from a mountain on a spinning neutron star, 149–150
from a spinning, deformed black hole,
from the big-bang birth of our universe, 155–157
gravity gradiometer, 209–211,
Halley’s comet,
Hollywood, culture of, 1–14, 277
IMBH (intermediate-mass black hole), 69–71, 86–87,
genesis of, 1–9
my science guidelines for, 4, 8, 9, 43
visual effects in, 10–12, 30–31, 75–87, 94–99, 138–145
movie sets for, 13–14
opening scene, Cooper trying to land a Ranger, 208
life on Earth (“Cooper’s world”), 106–107,
blight in crops on Earth, 31, 105–106, 111, 112, 114;
gravitational anomalies on Earth:
in opening scene of movie, 208
harvesters gone haywire, falling books and dust, 208
in Murph’s bedroom, 202, 208–209, 211
Cooper at NASA, 133, 273
Romilly explains wormholes,
the wormhole,
Ranger’s trip from
crew on Miller’s planet, 58–59, 161, 164–165,
crew’s return to
choice of where to go after Miller’s planet, 100
Ranger scraping ice clouds when landing on Mann’s planet,
crew on Mann’s planet, 178–179
Dr. Mann describing Professor’s struggle to understand gravity, 229
Romilly urging Cooper to seek information from Gargantua’s singularities, 234
scenes back on Earth:
the Professor and Murph in the Professor’s office, 213,
the Professor dying, 222