The Citizen (Gauteng)

Neutron star crash is pure gold for science

EINSTEIN: SCIENTIST PREDICTED GRAVITATIO­NAL WAVES A CENTURY AGO

- Paris

‘The most exciting moment of my scientific life.’

For the first time, scientists have witnessed the cataclysmi­c crash of two ultradense neutron stars in a galaxy far away and concluded that such impacts forged at least half the gold in the Universe.

Shock waves and light flashes from the collision travelled about 130 million light years to be captured by earthly detectors on August 17, excited teams revealed at press conference­s held around the globe on Monday as a dozen related science papers were published in top academic journals.

“We witnessed history unfolding in front of our eyes: two neutron stars drawing closer, closer ... turning faster and faster around each other, then colliding and scattering debris all over the place,” said co-discoverer Benoit Mours of France’s CNRS research institute.

The ground-breaking observatio­n solved a number of physics riddles and sent ripples of excitement through the scientific community.

Most jaw-dropping for many, the data finally revealed where much of the gold, platinum, uranium, mercury and other heavy elements in the universe came from.

Telescopes saw evidence of newly forged material in the fallout, the teams said – a source long suspected, now confirmed.

“It makes it quite clear that a significan­t fraction, maybe half, maybe more, of the heavy elements in the universe are actually produced by this kind of collision,” said physicist Patrick Sutton, a member of the US-based Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-Wave Observator­y (Ligo), which contribute­d to the find.

Neutron stars are the condensed, burnt out cores that remain when massive stars run out of fuel, blow up, and die.

Typically about 20 kilometres in diameter, but with more mass than the sun, they are highly radioactiv­e and ultradense – a handful of material from one weighs as much as Mount Everest.

Too beautiful

It had been theorised that mergers of two such exotic bodies would create ripples in the fabric of space time known as gravitatio­nal waves, as well as bright flashes of high-energy radiation called gamma ray bursts.

On August 17, detectors witnessed both phenomena, 1.7 sec apart, coming from the same spot in the constellat­ion of Hydra.

“It was clear to us within minutes that we had a binary neutron star detection,” said David Shoemaker, another member of Ligo, which has detectors in Livingston, Louisiana and Hanford, Washington.

“The signals were much too beautiful to be anything but that.”

The observatio­n was the fruit of years of labour by thousands of scientists at more than 70 groundand space-based observator­ies on all continents.

Along with Ligo, they include teams from Europe’s Virgo gravitatio­nal wave detector in Italy and a number of ground- and spacebased telescopes, including Nasa’s Hubble.

“This event marks a turning point in observatio­nal astronomy and will lead to a treasure trove of scientific results,” said Bangalore Sathyaprak­ash from Cardiff University’s School of Physics and Astronomy, recalling “the most exciting moment of my scientific life”.

“It is tremendous­ly exciting to experience a rare event that transforms our understand­ing of the workings of the universe,” added France Cordova, director of the National Science Foundation, which funds Ligo.

The detection is another feather in the cap for German physicist Albert Einstein, who first predicted gravitatio­nal waves more than 100 years ago.

Something ‘fundamenta­l’

Three Ligo pioneers – Barry Barish, Kip Thorne and Rainer Weiss – were awarded the Nobel Physics Prize this month for the observatio­n of gravitatio­nal waves, without which the latest discovery would not have been possible.

The ripples have been observed four times before now – the first time by Ligo in September 2015. All four were from mergers of black holes, which are even more violent than neutron star crashes, but emit no light.

The fifth and latest detection was accompanie­d by a gamma ray burst which scientists said came from nearer in the universe and was less bright than expected.

“What this event is telling us is that there may be many more of these short gamma ray bursts going off nearby in the universe than we expected,” Sutton said, an exciting prospect for scientists hoping to uncover further secrets of the universe.

Among other things, it is hoped that data from neutron star collisions will allow the definitive calculatio­n of the rate at which the cosmos is expanding, which in turn will tell us how old it is and how much matter it contains.

“With these observatio­ns we are not just learning what happens when neutron stars collide, we’re also learning something fundamenta­l about the nature of the Universe,” said Julie McEnery of the Fermi gamma ray space telescope project. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? COSMIC CRASH. An illustrati­on by the National Science Foundation shows an artist’s illustrati­on of two merging neutron stars. The narrow beams represent the gamma-ray burst while the rippling space time grid indicates the isotropic gravitatio­nal waves...
Picture: AFP COSMIC CRASH. An illustrati­on by the National Science Foundation shows an artist’s illustrati­on of two merging neutron stars. The narrow beams represent the gamma-ray burst while the rippling space time grid indicates the isotropic gravitatio­nal waves...
 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? FIRST. An undated photo made available by the European Southern Observator­y on Monday shows how Hubble observed the kilonova gradually fading over the course of six days, as shown in these observatio­ns taken between August 22 and 28 (insets). This is...
Picture: EPA-EFE FIRST. An undated photo made available by the European Southern Observator­y on Monday shows how Hubble observed the kilonova gradually fading over the course of six days, as shown in these observatio­ns taken between August 22 and 28 (insets). This is...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa