Saturday, July 16, 2011

Gravitational Waves



Gravitational Waves have been indirectly detected, not directly.

From this recent article at Universe Today:

Proponents (as proponents are want) say that we are on the verge of our first confirmed observation of a gravitational wave – or otherwise they reckon that we have already collected the data, but don’t fully know how to interpret them yet.

Gravitational waves have been indirectly detected via observations of pulsar PSR 1913+16, a member of a binary system, the orbit of which decays at the rate of approximately three millimetres per orbit. The inspiraling of the binary (i.e. the decay of its orbit) can only be explained by an invisible loss of energy, which we presume to be the result of gravitational waves transporting energy away from the system.
Direct observation of gravitational waves currently escapes us – but seems at least feasible by monitoring the alignment of widely separated test masses. Such monitoring systems are currently in place on Earth, including LIGO, which has test masses separated by up to four kilometres – that separation distance being monitored by lasers designed to detect tiny changes in that distance, which might result from the passage of a gravitational wave initiated from a distant point in the universe.
This is the current quest of citizen science users of Einstein@Home – the third most popularBOINC distributed computing project after SETI@Home (spot an alien) and Rosetta@Home (fold a protein).

5 comments:

  1. That's incredible to see we are still nowadays confirming Einstein's theory.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey, Jérôme ! Hey man are you on Facebook? There is a think tank I am honored to be a part of that can totally use your particular talents. Feel free to "friend" "Steve Colyer" and I'll invite you in.

    ReplyDelete
  3. But the antigravity in the vacuum?

    ReplyDelete
  4. What anti-gravity in the vacuum? There is no such thing as anti-gravity, and anyone who thinks there is, is probably an engineer thinking they're a scientist. If you meant Dark Energy, then OK I'll concede it DOES have an anti-gravity-LIKE aspect to it, but it's not anti-gravity.

    ReplyDelete
  5. http://www.hindawi.com/journals/aa/2011/196852/

    I saw an article about that, but now ican't findit, of course. Seems it is not completely ruled out, at least not in a tiny space.

    http://pirsa.org/11070013/ Antigravity Predicted Between Crunch and Bang in a Cyclic Universe

    ReplyDelete