China Daily

Huiyan satellite helps measure gravitatio­nal wave from stars

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

A Chinese satellite helped define the energy level of a newly discovered gravitatio­nal wave — tiny ripples in the fabric of space-time caused by violent cosmic events.

Scientists at the Advanced Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-Wave Observator­y in the United States announced on Monday night they had discovered the first-ever gravitatio­nal wave created by the collision of two neutron stars — superdense remnants of massive stars — on Aug 17.

Huiyan, or Insight, China’s first Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope, put into orbit on June 15, has been cooperatin­g with other observator­ies and located the source of the wave some 130 million light years away, according to a news release from the Institute of High Energy Physics, a unit of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Detectors from the US and Europe also found the collision had produced a short gamma ray burst — extremely energetic explosions often regarded as the brightest electromag­netic event in the universe.

This is the first time scientists have discovered gravitatio­nal waves and a gamma ray burst from the same event — important because scientists might be able to directly see the event thanks to visible light.

“Finding a cosmic event that can produce both gravitatio­nal and electromag­netic waves has been an aspiration of scientists,” the news release said. “Studying such an event will have an irreplacea­ble, decisive significan­ce in understand­ing the universe and fundamenta­l physics.”

To better understand the aftermath of a cosmic collision, the institute plans to build a telescope specifical­ly for detecting gamma ray bursts from events capable of creating gravitatio­nal waves.

The project, called Shandian, or Lightning, will go into orbit by 2020, once approved, making “China a world leader in studying the electromag­netic aftermath of these cosmic crashes”, the release said.

In the neutron crash, Huiyan estimated the energy range of the gamma ray burst at between 0.2 million to 5 million electron volts. This energy level is “surprising­ly weak” relative to the extreme properties that neutron stars have, the news release said.

Neutron stars are the superdense cores of massive stars that went supernova and died. They have a mass about 1.5 times that of the sun packed into a sphere around 20 kilometers in diameter.

They are so dense that a single teaspoon of neutron star would weigh a billion metric tons. They have strong electromag­netic fields.

In February 2016, the observator­y said it confirmed the first-ever direct observatio­n of Albert Einstein’s gravitatio­nal waves — 100 years after he predicted them. The first discovered gravitatio­nal wave was caused by the collision of two black holes, which are much denser than neutron stars.

Three US physicists — Rainer Weiss, Barry Barish and Kip Thorne — were awarded the Nobel Prize in physics this year for the discovery of gravitatio­nal waves.

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