Kuwait Times

US trio wins physics Nobel for spotting wrinkles in cosmos

‘It is already promising a revolution in astrophysi­cs’

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Historic culminatio­n of decades of research hailed

STOCKHOLM: US astrophysi­cists Barry Barish, Kip Thorne and Rainer Weiss were awarded the Nobel Physics Prize yesterday for the discovery of gravitatio­nal waves, offering a sneak peak at the Universe’s very beginnings. Predicted by Albert Einstein a century ago as part of his theory of general relativity, gravitatio­nal waves are “ripples” in space-time-the theoretica­l fabric of the cosmos. They are the aftermath of violent galactic events, such as colliding black holes or imploding massive stars, and can reveal events that took place billions of years ago.

The first detection of gravitatio­nal waves happened in September 2015 at the US-based Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-wave Observator­y (LIGO), where the three Nobel laureates worked. “Their discovery shook the world,” said Goran K Hansson, the head of the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences which selects the Nobel laureates. Announced in February 2016 to great excitement in the scientific community, the discovery was hailed as the historic culminatio­n of decades of research. It has clinched numerous astrophysi­cs prizes.

In 1984, Thorne, now 77, and Weiss, 85, co-created LIGO at the prestigiou­s California Institute of Technology, which has taken home 18 Nobels since the prizes were first awarded in 1901. Barish, 81, joined the project in 1994 and helped bring it to completion. LIGO is now a collaborat­ion between more than 1,000 researcher­s from 20 countries. The 2015 observatio­n was of two black holes smashing into each other some 1.3 billion light-years away.

“Although the signal was extremely weak when it reached Earth, it is already promising a revolution in astrophysi­cs,” the Nobel academy said. “Gravitatio­nal waves are an entirely new way of following the most violent events in space and testing the limits of our knowledge.” Gravitatio­nal waves are minuscule, and near-undetectab­le because they interact very weakly with matter and travel through the Universe at the speed of light unimpeded. The ripples emitted by a pair of merging black holes, for example, would stretch a one-million-kilometer ruler on Earth by less than the size of an atom. Since 2015, the enigmatic ripples have been detected three more times: Twice by LIGO and once by the Virgo detector located at the European Gravitatio­nal Observator­y (EGO) in Cascina, Italy. “Einstein was convinced it would never be possible to measure them,” the jury said. “The LIGO project’s achievemen­t was using a pair of gigantic laser interferom­eters to measure a change thousands of times smaller than an atomic nucleus, as the gravitatio­nal wave passed the Earth.”

‘Universe full of music’

Black holes emit no light, and can only be observed through gravitatio­nal waves that occur when they collide and violently merge-offering scientists a means of studying them. “If we could hear all the waves and not only the strongest ones, the entire universe would be full of music, like birds chirping in a forest, with a louder tone here and a quieter one there,” the academy said.

Weiss was awarded half the prize, which comes with nine million Swedish kronor (about $1.1 million or 940,000 euros), while Barish and Thorne shared the rest. “It’s really wonderful. I view this more as a thing that recognizes the work of about a thousand people,” Weiss said shortly after the announceme­nt. “It took us a long time... two months... to convince ourselves that we had seen (something) that came from the outside and was truly a gravitatio­nal wave.”

Thorne said he had expected the discovery to be honored with a Nobel one day. “I didn’t hope it would go to me personally, I hoped it would actually go to the entire collaborat­ion ... which designed, built, and perfected the gravitatio­nal waves detector which made the discovery,” he said. Caroline Crawford, an astronomer at Cambridge University, told AFP the discovery “holds the potential for a completely new way of observing parts of the cosmos, the parts... completely obscured from our view.”

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 ?? — AFP ?? STOCKHOLM: Nobel Committee for Physics members announce the 2017 Nobel Prize winners in Physics yesterday at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in. 2017 laureates for the Nobel Prize in Physics are: Rainer Weiss, Barry C Barish and Kip S Thorne.
— AFP STOCKHOLM: Nobel Committee for Physics members announce the 2017 Nobel Prize winners in Physics yesterday at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in. 2017 laureates for the Nobel Prize in Physics are: Rainer Weiss, Barry C Barish and Kip S Thorne.
 ?? — AFP ?? A combo made of file photos shows (LtoR) Rainer Weiss, Barry Barish and Kip Thorne, who won the Nobel Physics Prize 2017.
— AFP A combo made of file photos shows (LtoR) Rainer Weiss, Barry Barish and Kip Thorne, who won the Nobel Physics Prize 2017.

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