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OH MY GALAXY WE FOUND GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. AAAHHHH
Hey star-gazers
A long time ago, in a galaxy far far away...two black holes collided in a fateful swirling
waltz. Just like when you toss a rock into a pond and the KERPLUNK creates ripples on
the surface of the water, this collision sent ripples through the fabric of space time.
And we finally detected one of these ripples or as researchers call them, gravitational
waves. We’ve been looking for these kinds of waves for a long time. Albert Einstein
first proposed their existence in his theory of relativity, OVER A HUNDRED YEARS AGO. So
we’ve been searching for them ever since.
And just how the ripples in the pond get smaller as they move further from the KERPLUNK point,
the ripples in spacetime get smaller too. That’s why they are so hard to detect. Until
now! Today (LIGO) or the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory announced that
they found the galactic KERPLUNK by detecting, or hearing, one of the ripples. shhh listen.
Ladies and gentlemen listen to that beautiful sound.
Ahh music to my ears.
This signal was seen on September 14th last year, but the cataclysmic event that caused
it happened nearly 1.3 billion years ago when two black holes collided.
While two black holes colliding has been theorized, it hasn’t been observed before. The theory
goes that two black holes will circle each other and lose energy that’s released as
gravitational waves. Over time, they will get closer and closer over the course of a
few billion years then finally collide in a fraction of a second. This releases a large
amount of mass as energy in the form of gravitational waves. In this case, the black holes were
about 30 times the mass of the Sun and were moving at half the speed of light in that
last fraction of a second. This huge impact sent a shock wave of gravitational waves,
or ripples in spacetime, through the universe at the speed of light.
But as massive as that collision was, the reverberations that reached us were tiny.
Like "one one thousandth the diameter of a proton," according David Reitze,(right-z)
the executive director of LIGO. LIGO was able to detect such a tiny wiggle by using two
labs - one in Livingston, Louisiana, and one in Hanford, Washington.
The labs used massive and precise lasers. Like 2.5-mile long lasers beams that can read
10,000 times smaller than a proton. These lasers were fired into two L shaped pipes
that bounced light around a series of mirrors. A strain in space-time would change the timing
of when the lasers reach their destination. And that’s just what happened on that fateful
day. The same wiggle showed up on the detectors in the two labs just 7 milliseconds apart.
And more incredible, these wiggles matched up to what supercomputer models of gravitational
waves had already predicted. Which were based off of calculations from Einstein’s theory
of relativity.
So it’s the real deal. We know have solid evidence of gravitational waves, and evidence
of binary black holes! And this discovery proves Einstein’s theory. FINALLY.
We’ve been searching for these guys for a century! Rumors have it that this discovery
could make the short list for a nobel prize!
Why? Well researchers are hailing that the discovery could be as exciting as when we
discovered x-rays. LIGO co-founder said it has “opened a new window onto the Universe".
Studying and tracking gravitational waves will help us better understand black holes,
supernovas, other really large space events and even possibly the fundamental laws of
the universe.
We’ll learn so much more about the universe and how it works as LIGO upgrades their equipment
to become more and more sensitive. And in a few decades the European Space Agency plans
to launch a space-based gravitational wave detector. So hopefully more gravitational
waves will be detected.
If you want to learn more about this amazing discovery, check out the study published in
the journal Physical Review Letters
Wow. Just wow guys. so much incredible science happening right now, in our lifetime! Einstein
would be so proud.
If gravitational waves seem like a familiar concept, it’s because we’ve talked about
them before on DNews. A telescope called BICEP2 is looking for evidence of gravitational waves
of a different kind, from the most cataclysmic event of all time, the big bang. To learn
more about that, check out these episodes, right here.