Gravitational Waves Detected 100 Years After Einstein's Prediction
Gravitational Waves Detected 100 Years After Einstein's Prediction
LIGO Opens New Window on the Universe with Observation of Gravitational Waves from
Colliding Black Holes
WASHINGTON, DC/Cascina, Italy
For the first time, scientists have observed ripples in the fabric of spacetime called
gravitational waves, arriving at the earth from a cataclysmic event in the distant universe.
This confirms a major prediction of Albert Einstein’s 1915 general theory of relativity and
opens an unprecedented new window onto the cosmos.
Gravitational waves carry information about their dramatic origins and about the nature of
gravity that cannot otherwise be obtained.
Physicists have concluded that the detected
gravitational waves 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.
This collision of two black holes had been predicted but never observed.
The gravitational waves were detected on September 14, 2015 at 5:51 a.m.
Eastern
Daylight Time (09:51 UTC) by both of the twin Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave
Observatory (LIGO) detectors, located in Livingston, Louisiana, and Hanford, Washington,
USA.
The LIGO Observatories are funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), and
were conceived, built, and are operated by Caltech and MIT.
The discovery, accepted for
publication in the journal Physical Review Letters, was made by the LIGO Scientific
Collaboration (which includes the GEO Collaboration and the Australian Consortium for
Interferometric Gravitational Astronomy) and the Virgo Collaboration using data from the
two LIGO detectors.
Based on the observed signals, LIGO scientists estimate that the black holes for this event
were about 29 and 36 times the mass of the sun, and the event took place 1.3 billion years
ago.
About 3 times the mass of the sun was converted into gravitational waves in a fraction
of a second—with a peak power output about 50 times that of the whole visible universe.
By looking at the time of arrival of the signals—the detector in Livingston recorded the
event 7 milliseconds before the detector in Hanford—scientists can say that the source
was located in the Southern Hemisphere.
According to general relativity, a pair of black holes orbiting around each other lose energy
through the emission of gravitational waves, causing them to gradually approach each
other over billions of years, and then much more quickly in the final minutes.
During the
final fraction of a second, the two black holes collide into each other at nearly one-half the
speed of light and form a single more massive black hole, converting a portion of the
combined black holes’ mass to energy, according to Einstein’s formula E=mc2.
This energy
is emitted as a final strong burst of gravitational waves.
It is these gravitational waves that
LIGO has observed.
The existence of gravitational waves was first demonstrated in the 1970s and 80s by
Joseph Taylor, Jr., and colleagues.
Taylor and Russell Hulse discovered in 1974 a binary
system composed of a pulsar in orbit around a neutron star.
Taylor and Joel M.
Weisberg
in 1982 found that the orbit of the pulsar was slowly shrinking over time because of the
release of energy in the form of gravitational waves.
For discovering the pulsar and
showing that it would make possible this particular gravitational wave measurement,
Hulse and Taylor were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1993.
The new LIGO discovery is the first observation of gravitational waves themselves, made by
measuring the tiny disturbances the waves make to space and time as they pass through
the earth.
“Our observation of gravitational waves accomplishes an ambitious goal set out over 5
decades ago to directly detect this elusive phenomenon and better understand the
universe, and, fittingly, fulfills Einstein’s legacy on the 100th anniversary of his general
theory of relativity,” says Caltech’s David H.
Reitze, executive director of the LIGO
Laboratory.
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