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How gravitational waves attracted a Nobel Prize

By Eric Thrane, Paul Lasky and Yuri Levin
An illustration of the collision of two black holes, an event detected for the first time ever by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. Image courtesy of the SXS (Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes) Project
An illustration of the collision of two black holes, an event detected for the first time ever by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. Image courtesy of the SXS (Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes) Project

Oct. 3 (UPI) -- The 2017 Nobel prize for physics, awarded overnight in Sweden by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, began with a discussion 42 years ago between two scientists in a hotel room in Washington, D.C.

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Kip Thorne, a theoretical physicist from Caltech, and Rainer "Rai" Weiss, an experimentalist from MIT, debated what would have seemed to most physicists like a far-fetched, borderline crazy idea: the detection of ripples in the fabric of spacetime called gravitational waves.

But the two young men were serious. Weiss had written a detailed technical paper outlining a proposal for an experiment that would go on to become LIGO (the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory).

Thorne, meanwhile, had thought a lot about potential sources of gravitational waves and had developed a deep appreciation of just how much their detection would tell us about exotic astrophysical objects such as black holes and neutron stars.

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A great collaboration was forged that night. And it was soon strengthened by Ronald Drever, a brilliant experimental physicist who joined the faculty at Caltech. The three came from very different cultural backgrounds.

Thorne grew up in a Mormon family in Utah. Weiss was born in Berlin, and when he was a child, his half-Jewish family escaped the Nazis by first moving to Prague and then fleeing Czechoslovakia just before it was invaded. Drever hailed from Glasgow, Scotland, and had a thick Scottish accent.

They were united by their passion to "hear" the universe with gravitational waves.

Gravitational waves are emitted from some of the universe's most catastrophic events such as exploding stars and colliding black holes. Every source emits gravitational waves differently. For sources detectable by LIGO, these waves have the same frequencies as the sound waves we can hear.

By studying the precise "sound" of a gravitational wave, it is possible to reconstruct the event that created it. They offer a unique window on the universe, allowing us to probe black holes and other extreme objects.

Together, they developed the ideas behind LIGO, obtained the support of Caltech and MIT, and secured research funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation. Most importantly, they inspired two generations of physicists around the world to devote their lives to the quest for gravitational waves.

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The chirp heard round the world

It took many years of dedicated teamwork to realize the vision of LIGO. The laboratory took shape under the leadership of experimental physicist Barry Barish, now an emeritus professor at Caltech.

He created the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, an international team now numbering more than 1,000 scientists working on all aspects of LIGO science and technology, from laser physics to data analysis algorithms to astrophysics.

Australia was an early international partner in the consortium, and Australian scientists made important contributions to LIGO instrumentation, theoretical modeling and data analysis.

The instrument was so complex that it had to be built in two stages. The first stage of LIGO operated through the 2000s, demonstrating the technology that would be needed to detect gravitational waves. Not until the second stage, Advanced LIGO, was the equipment sensitive enough to detect the gravitational waves themselves.

The newly refurbished Advanced LIGO was ready to go in late 2015. Then, on Sept. 14 that year, days after Advanced LIGO was switched on, a burst of gravitational waves shook the mirrors used to monitor the curvature of spacetime by a distance of about one-thousandth of the size of a proton.

While this seems unimaginably small, LIGO is an instrument of unimaginable sensitivity. Even without the aid of a computer algorithm, scientists could see in the data the telltale signature of a merging pair of black holes, each 30 times more massive than the sun.

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They could also "hear" it: the gravitational-wave signal of LIGO's black hole merger, converted into audio, makes a characteristic chirping sound.

The sound of two black holes colliding. LIGO163 KB (download)

When news of the discovery broke, science enthusiasts took to social media to celebrate with their own renditions.

By the time of the first announcement, Ron Drever was in a nursing home back in Scotland, sick with dementia. Nonetheless he was cognizant of the LIGO discovery, and was able to enjoy Kip Thorne's visit sharing memories of LIGO's early days. Ron Drever died in March this year.

Ronald Drever, a LIGO co-founder. American Physical Society

This year's prize, to Weiss, Barish and Thorne, "for decisive contributions to the LIGO detector and the observation of gravitational waves", continues the Nobel tradition of honoring astronomical discoveries of extreme phenomena in which Albert Einstein's general relativity plays a major role.

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One of us (Levin), was fortunate to carry out dissertation research under Thorne's supervision. As much as he must be savoring this great Nobel honor, we're certain that the feeling pales in comparison to the moment he set eyes on LIGO's detection data for the first time.

A century after Albert Einstein's prediction, and after a lifetime of searching, there it was: the gravitational waves from two ill-fated black holes.

A new era in astronomy

The discovery is a milestone in 21st-century science. While the detection of gravitational waves confirmed Einstein's theory, it also marked the beginning of a new way of gazing up at the heavens: gravitational-wave astronomy.

Since the first detection, the collaboration has published on detections from more black holes, and is yet to publish all of the exciting results from the second advanced LIGO observation run that finished in late August.

For the latest published discovery, the two LIGO instruments were joined by another experiment in Italy called Virgo. This allowed for a far better understanding of the direction to the colliding black holes, forging the way for conventional telescopes to try to catch a glimpse of these violent events.

Australia continues to play an important role in gravitational-wave astronomy. The newly funded Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational-wave Discovery (OzGrav) will make the most of LIGO discoveries while laying the groundwork for the next generation of gravitational-wave detectors. One day, we might even have our own gravitational-wave lab Down Under.

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The ConversationWith LIGO and other detectors, we can explore Einstein's hidden universe. But for all the gravitational waves we anticipate, the most exciting prospect to us is that we might see something that no one has predicted. So watch this space.

Eric Thrane is a senior lecturer in physics & astronomy, ARC future fellow and node leader at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) at Monash University; Paul Lasky is a lecturer and ARC future fellow at Monash; and Yuri Levin is a professor at Columbia University, group leader at the Flatiron Institute and adjunct professor at Monash.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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