Gravitational waves:
A leap towards theory of everything
Gravitational waves
detected, Einstein vindicated after 100 yrs
In an announcement
that electrified the world of astronomy, scientists said Thursday
that they have finally detected gravitational waves, the ripples in
the fabric of space-time that Albert Einstein predicted a century
ago.
Some scientists
likened the breakthrough to the moment Galileo took up a telescope to
look at the planets.
The discovery of
these waves, created by violent collisions in the universe, excites
astronomers because it opens the door to a new way of observing the
cosmos. For them, it’s like turning a silent movie into a talkie
because these waves are the soundtrack of the cosmos.
“Until this moment
we had our eyes on the sky and we couldn’t hear the music,” said
Columbia University astrophysicist Szabolcs Marka, a member of the
discovery team. “The skies will never be the same.”
An all-star
international team of astrophysicists (including from India) used a
newly upgraded and excruciatingly sensitive $1.1 billion instrument
known as the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or
LIGO, to detect a gravitational wave from the distant crash of two
black holes, one of the ways these ripples are created.
To make sense of the
raw data, the scientists translated the wave into sound. At a news
conference, they played what they called a “chirp” — the signal
they heard on September 14. It was barely perceptible even when
enhanced.
Some physicists said
the finding is as big a deal as the 2012 discovery of the subatomic
Higgs boson, sometimes called the “God particle”. Some said this
is bigger.
“It’s really
comparable only to Galileo taking up the telescope and looking at the
planets,” said Penn State physics theorist Abhay Ashtekar, who
wasn’t part of the discovery team. “Our understanding of the
heavens changed dramatically”.
Gravitational waves,
first theorised by Einstein in 1916 as part of his theory of general
relativity, are extraordinarily faint ripples in space-time, the
hard-to-fathom fourth dimension that combines time with the familiar
up, down, left and right. When massive but compact objects like black
holes or neutron stars collide, they send gravity ripples across the
universe.
Scientists found
indirect proof of the existence of gravitational waves in the 1970s —
computations that showed they ever so slightly changed the orbits of
two colliding stars — and the work was honoured as part of the 1993
Nobel Prize in physics. But Thursday’s announcement was a direct
detection of a gravitational wave.
And that’s
considered a big difference.
“It’s one thing
to know soundwaves exist, but it’s another to actually hear
Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony,” said Marc Kamionkowsi, a physicist
at Johns Hopkins University who wasn’t part of the discovery team.
“In this case we’re actually getting to hear black holes
merging.”
Gravitational waves
are the “soundtrack of the universe”, said team member Chad Hanna
of Pennsylvania State University.
Detecting
gravitational waves is so difficult that when Einstein first
theorised about them, he figured scientists would never be able to
hear them. Einstein later doubted himself and even questioned in the
1930s whether they really do exist, but by the 1960s scientists had
concluded they probably do, Ashtekar said.
In 1979, the
National Science Foundation decided to give money to the California
Institute of Technology and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
to come up with a way to detect the waves.
Twenty years later,
they started building two LIGO detectors in Hanford, Washington, and
Livingston, Louisiana, and they were turned on in 2001. But after
years with no luck, scientists realised they had to build a more
advanced detection system, which was turned on last September.
“This is truly a
scientific moonshot and we did it. We landed on the moon,” said
David Reitze, LIGO’s executive director.
The new LIGO in some
frequencies is three times more sensitive than the old one and is
able to detect ripples at lower frequencies that the old one
couldn’t. And more upgrades are planned.
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