Science to ride gravitational waves

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Lifer
Jan 7, 2002
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Science to ride gravitational waves
By Jonathan Amos
BBC News science reporter, Hanover

Many expect it to be one of the biggest scientific breakthroughs of our age: "There'll certainly be a Nobel Prize in it for somebody," says Jim Hough.

The UK professor is standing on a farm road in Lower Saxony, Germany, with a crop of beet on one side and sprouts on the other.

But the real interest lies at his feet - with some shabby, corrugated metal sheeting. For a moment, it looks like an upturned pig trough until you realise it stretches for hundreds of metres.

The sheeting hides a trench and, within it, the vacuumed tube of an experiment Hough believes will finally detect the most elusive of astrophysical phenomena - gravitational waves.

The Glasgow University scientist has been chasing these "ripples" in space-time for more than 30 years and feels certain he is now just a matter of months away from bagging his quarry.

It's equivalent to measuring a change of one hydrogen atom diameter in the distance from the Earth to the Sun
Prof Karsten Danzmann, Hanover University
"It will be a big event for two reasons: it will be yet another confirmation that Einstein's Theory of General Relativity is correct, but it will also open up a new kind of astronomy that will allow us to look inside the most violent events in the Universe."

A new kind of astronomy requires a new type of "telescope", and that's just what Hough and UK-German colleagues have been developing on farmland a short drive from Hanover. It is called GEO 600.

Stretch and squash

Its looks are deceptive. Anonymous silver shacks house state-of-the-art electronics and a high-power laser.


A NEW VIEW ON THE COSMOS
Gravitational waves are an inevitable consequence of the Theory of General Relativity
They describe the gravity force as distortions made by matter in the fabric of space-time
Any moving mass will produce gravitational waves and they propagate at the speed of light
GEO 600 (above) fires a laser into L-shaped tunnels to detect their very weak signal
And then there is that trench - two in fact, running out at right-angles to each other for more than half a km. Their vacuum tubes end in super-smooth mirrors slung by pure-glass wires from damped frames.

This is precision engineering at the extreme. To have any hope of detecting gravitational waves, it has to be.

Unlike electromagnetic waves - the light seen by traditional telescopes - gravitational waves are extremely weak. If one were to pass through your body it would alternately stretch your space in one dimension while squashing it in another - but the changes are fantastically small.

Any moving mass will send gravitational waves radiating outwards at the speed of light; but only truly massive bodies, such as exploding stars and coalescing neutron stars, can disturb space-time sufficiently for our technology to pick up the signal.

"The displacement sensitivity of GEO 600 is one three-thousandth of the diameter of a proton," explains Professor Karsten Danzmann, from the Albert Einstein Institute and Hanover University.

"Put another way, it's equivalent to measuring a change of one hydrogen atom diameter in the distance from the Earth to the Sun."

And it is these tiny deviations that GEO 600 hopes to measure in the laser light it bounces through its L-shaped tubes.

Cosmic symphony

Careful refinement and tuning of the instrumentation has moved the installation very close to the required sensitivity - towards a possible "eureka" moment.

The UK-German team is working with US colleagues who have two similar facilities known collectively as Ligo - Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory.

Imagine being able to see the world but you are deaf, and then suddenly someone gives you the ability to hear things as well - you get an extra dimension of perception
Prof Bernard Schutz, Cardiff University
These set-ups, at Livingston in Louisiana and Hanford in Washington, employ laser arms that are 4km long.

Both Ligo and GEO 600 are to begin a full "science run" in November, with the aim of gathering data continuously for 18 months. In that time, they would expect to see perhaps two events, maybe more, that can be put down to a passing gravitational wave.

A detection would be confirmed if at least two of the widely separated installations record the same signal. But, as great an achievement as that would be, it really is just the start.

The real aim is to have a new means of studying the Universe - to trace its exotic phenomena in detail in a way that does not rely on light.

"The analogy I like is this: imagine being able to see the world but you are deaf, and then suddenly someone gives you the ability to hear things as well - you get an extra dimension of perception," explains Professor Bernard Schutz from the Albert Einstein Institute and Cardiff University.

"Up until now we've only been able to see the Universe with our telescopes, but with gravitational waves we will be able to hear it as well; and that's going to convey a different type of information.

"Most of the Universe cannot emit electromagnetic waves - we will never see it with light. But we can see it, or parts of it, with gravitational waves."

With this in mind, the scientists have even grander plans which go beyond merely upgrading GEO 600 and Ligo: they want to put an observatory in space.


BUILDING A NEW ASTRONOMY
Laser interferometers are being constructed across the world
The installations will see into the cores of exploding stars
They will make it possible to trace the outline of black holes
Space observatories will probe the first moments of creation
The new knowledge may lead to a unified theory of physics
Preparations for this mission, known as Lisa (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna), are well advanced. It would fire lasers between three spacecraft flying in formation and separated by five million km.

Lisa would allow scientists to look at lower frequencies than are possible on Earth, to signals that come from the merger of monster black holes.

Modelling also suggests it should be capable of detecting remnant radiation from the Big Bang itself, enabling science to probe the first moments of creation and perhaps pull together some of its contradictory theories.

"You don't often get things that are very small that are also very massive but, of course, in the very earliest moments of the Universe we did," says Professor Mike Cruise from Birmingham University.

"Some of these observations are going to give us a clue as to how gravity can be viewed in terms of quantum mechanics and the prospect of that is just mind-boggling." http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4415722.stm
 

ItTheCow

Senior member
Apr 7, 2002
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Bookmarked. And how am I the first one to reply to soemthing like this, 1.5 hours after its posting?!
 

Auryg

Platinum Member
Dec 28, 2003
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Originally posted by: ItTheCow
Bookmarked. And how am I the first one to reply to soemthing like this, 1.5 hours after its posting?!

Cause it's long and it wont really affect any of us, atleast in the short term :)
 

DAGTA

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
8,172
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Sounds like a great setup and I hope it works, but they're going to have a hard time getting past measurement errors.
 

Analog

Lifer
Jan 7, 2002
12,755
3
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Originally posted by: ItTheCow
Bookmarked. And how am I the first one to reply to soemthing like this, 1.5 hours after its posting?!

Night crowd..... My bra thread on the other hand... ;)
 

YOyoYOhowsDAjello

Moderator<br>A/V & Home Theater<br>Elite member
Aug 6, 2001
31,205
45
91
Maybe I'm really tired... but it seemed like they repeated stuff a couple times in the article?

EDIT: *looks at the original article*
oh :eek: