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Home » Greatest Mysteries of Gravity – Brian Greene & Kip Thorne (Transcript)

Greatest Mysteries of Gravity – Brian Greene & Kip Thorne (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Nobel laureate Kip Thorne in conversation with Brian Greene @ World Science Festival on “Greatest Mysteries of Gravity”, premiered December 6, 2025.

Brief Notes: In this masterful exploration of the cosmos, Brian Greene sits down with Nobel laureate Kip Thorne to recount the half-century of intellectual struggle and breakthrough that led to the discovery of gravitational waves. Thorne offers a rare look into the early skepticism surrounding black holes, detailing how giants like Einstein and Oppenheimer grappled with the “singularity” and sharing personal anecdotes about his legendary mentor, John Wheeler.

The conversation tracks the audacious decades-long journey of LIGO—from its initial 1970s blueprints to the high-stakes management shifts and the eventual “profound relief” of the first detection in 2015. Beyond the hardware, the two discuss the future of gravitational wave astronomy, the potential to “hear” the Big Bang, and Thorne’s unique creative collaborations that brought the warped side of our universe to life in the film Interstellar.

Introduction: A Pioneer in Gravitational Physics

BRIAN GREENE: Hey, everyone. Thanks for joining us today. We’re going to be talking about gravitational physics—black holes, wormholes, gravitational waves—both from the science, of course, but also from the artistic and filmic perspectives.

And I’m so pleased that we’re being joined by someone who, for more than half a century, has been a pioneer behind our understanding of gravitational physics. He was the leading force behind the LIGO experiment, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory that first detected gravitational waves back in 2015, for which he shared the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics. You’ve guessed who that is, no doubt by this point. Kip Thorne. Thank you.

KIP THORNE: Thank you, Brian, so much for being here. You exaggerate, but thank you.

BRIAN GREENE: Not at all. Not at all. So I thought we would begin with black holes, a subject near and dear to your heart. And if it’s not asking too much, can we go just for a moment all the way back to John Mitchell and Laplace, the folks who even long before the general theory of relativity intuited the possibility of things like black holes.

The Early Intuitions: Mitchell and Laplace

KIP THORNE: Yeah. And so back in that era, the understanding of gravity was that of Newton, and nobody knew anything about the speed of light limit, but you could imagine an object that was so strong that whatever the speed of light was, that light couldn’t escape it. And that’s what John Mitchell did.

And it was just very plausible that he was right, but they didn’t know enough about the laws of physics to really be able to determine whether he was right.

BRIAN GREENE: And what was the general reaction? Was there a reaction in those days to that possibility?

KIP THORNE: I don’t know. I haven’t looked into it deeply enough. Certainly the real embrace of these ideas didn’t come until awfully recently. And I presume that there was a lot of skepticism then, as there was in the 1920s and even into the 1930s and 40s and 50s and 60s.

BRIAN GREENE: For sure. For sure. So let’s get into the more modern version, which takes us really to the trenches in World War I, right?

Schwarzschild’s Breakthrough

KIP THORNE: Karl Schwarzschild, amazing man. Karl Schwarzschild was a great astronomer, astrophysicist. He’s sitting in the trenches in World War I, and Einstein has just formulated his general relativity laws. And Schwarzschild reads about this and he does a little calculation and he sends Einstein a letter and says, “I found an exact solution of your equations.”

Quickly became named the Schwarzschild solution. But it was a great mystery as to what it really described. It was perhaps the external gravitational field of the Earth. But suppose you take the Earth away and you still have a solution. And suppose you go down toward the center, what’s going on?

That’s what it took decades to really sort out. It did turn out to be the gravitational field of a compact star, the gravitational field of a black hole, the gravitational field of a wormhole. Turned out to be all these things depending on just how you manipulated it.

BRIAN GREENE: And this was the first exact solution to Einstein. Einstein himself didn’t have an exact solution of his own equations, right?

KIP THORNE: Precisely. So it was rather momentous.

BRIAN GREENE: And why do you think Einstein—I mean, when you look in the textbooks, it can be very misleading because we clean up the history and make it all very logical and straightforward. But at least when you reach Schwarzschild’s textbook solution, it doesn’t take that much. You make some assumptions, spherical symmetry, static, you know. So why didn’t Einstein find that solution?

KIP THORNE: I don’t know. I think his attention was mostly focused in other directions is primarily the case. I mean, he had so much going on intellectually in his life. He wasn’t just doing general relativity at this time. He was doing other things in statistical physics. He was doing early thinking about quantum theory.

It was amazing how many different irons he had in the fire in that period.

The Schwarzschild Singularity Mystery

BRIAN GREENE: Now, he was a champion of this solution. It’s not like you can imagine, the letter shows up and he’s like conveniently puts it into the waste bin and does his own version of it or something like that. So he was very open.

KIP THORNE: And he was very open to it. But it did have this very puzzling property that when you went down to a certain distance away from the center, called the Schwarzschild radius, not surprisingly, or the gravitational radius, the mathematics goes singular. One thing blows up, becomes infinite, and another thing goes to zero.

And it looks like time and space reverse rolls. It just looks crazy when you go to that location. So that came to be called the Schwarzschild singularity. And it was called that for decades. It turned out not to really be a physical singularity, but it was a singularity of the mathematics in the actual form that Schwarzschild wrote down the mathematics.

BRIAN GREENE: And so that was a puzzle for a long time.