ional energy a graviton. In principle, gravitational waves arriving at the earth would consist of gravitons. In practice, gravitational waves would consist of apparently continuous streams of gravitons, and individual gravitons could not be detected.Einstein's theory did not include quantum effects. For most of the 20th century, theoretical physicists have been unsuccessful in their attempts to formulate a theory that resembles Einstein's theory but also includes gravitons. Despite the lack of a complete quantum theory, it is possible to make some partial predictions about quantized gravitation. In the 1970s, British physicist Stephen Hawking showed that quantum mechanical processes in the strong gravitational pull just outside of black holes would create particles and quanta that move away from the black hole, thereby robbing it of energy. A. Theory of Everything Print section An important trend in modern theoretical physics is to find a theory of everything (TOE), in which all four of the fundamental forces are seen to be really different aspects of the same single universal force. Physicists already have unified electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force and have made progress in joining these two forces with the strong nuclear force (see Grand Unification Theories). However, relativistic gravitation, with its geometric and mathematically complex character, poses the most difficult challenge. Einstein spent most of his later years searching for an all-encompassing theory by trying to make electromagnetism geometrical like gravitation. The modern approach is to try to make gravitation fit the pattern of the other fundamental forces. Much of this work involves looking for mathematical patterns. A TOE is difficult to test using experiments because the effects of a TOE would be important only in the rarest circumstances....