As news of the biggest scientific breakthrough in recent times broke early this morning, a retired Bay of Plenty resident sat down and read the headlines with excitement.
Professor Roy Kerr, 81, had plenty to be elated about: much of the work under-pinning the discovery of so-called "gravitational waves" could be traced back to his seminal theoretical work more than 50 years ago.
An Emeritus Professor of Canterbury University and recipient of the Einstein Medal, Professor Kerr was credited with finding the solution of Einstein's equations which describes rotating black holes.
Read more:
• Einstein was right, but what does the big breakthrough mean?
• Physicists detect gravitational waves from violent black-hole merger
• Gravitational waves: Stephen Hawking celebrates discovery
The team of of physicists that confirmed the existence of gravitational waves -- ripples thorough our universe that have only been theorised until now -- concluded that they were produced during the final fraction of a second of the merger of two black holes to produce a single, more massive spinning black hole.