Relativity is notoriously counter-intuitive. You can read Einstein’s original papers or modern textbooks like Hartle or Carroll multiple times, but until you calculate the Christoffel symbols for a Schwarzschild metric or derive the Doppler shift for a receding star, the math remains abstract. A curated list of 300 problems allows you to:
"300 Problems in Special and General Relativity with Complete Solutions" describes a substantial pedagogical resource aimed at students and instructors transitioning from foundational relativity to advanced problem-solving. Whether this is an imagined title or a specific existing collection, the idea behind such a volume is pedagogically powerful: coupling a large, varied problem set with full solutions accelerates conceptual understanding, technical facility, and exam preparedness. Relativity is notoriously counter-intuitive
The primary resource matching your request is the book 300 Problems in Special and General Relativity: With Complete Solutions Whether this is an imagined title or a
: Provides the abstract and cataloging information for the text. ResearchGate Relativity is notoriously counter-intuitive
The journey from curious student to relativity master begins with the first solved problem.