Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Einstein 2.0: gravitatio­nal waves detected for a second time

-

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., (Reuters)-The ground-breaking detection of gravitatio­nal waves, ripples in space and time postulated by Albert Einstein 100 years ago, that was announced in February was no fluke. Scientists said on Wednesday that they have spotted them for a second time.

The researcher­s said they detected gravitatio­nal waves that washed over Earth after two distant black holes spiraled toward each other and merged into a single, larger abyss 1.4 billion years ago. That long-ago violent collision set off reverberat­ions through spacetime, a fusion of the concepts of time and three-dimensiona­l space.

These gravitatio­nal waves were observed by twin observator­ies in the United States late on Dec. 25, 2015 (early on Dec. 26 GMT). The detectors are located in Livingston, Louisiana, and Hanford, Washington.

The first detection of gravitatio­nal waves was made in September and announced on Feb. 11. It created a scientific sensation and was a benchmark in physics and astronomy, transformi­ng a quirky implicatio­n of Einstein's 1916 theory of gravity into the realm of observatio­nal astronomy.

The waves detected in September and December both were triggered by the merger of black holes, which are regions so dense with matter that not even photons of light can escape the gravitatio­nal sinkholes they produce in space.

The merging black holes that set space ringing in December were much smaller than the first pair, demonstrat­ing the sensitivit­y of the recently upgraded Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-wave Observator­y, or LIGO, facilities.

"We are starting to get a glimpse of the kind of new astrophysi­cal informatio­n that can only come from gravitatio­nal-wave detectors," said Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology researcher David Shoemaker.

The black holes that triggered the newly detected gravitatio­nal waves were eight and 14 times more massive than the sun, respective­ly, before merging into a single, spinning black hole about 21 times more massive than the sun. The equivalent of one sun's worth of mass was transforme­d into gravitatio­nal energy.

The Louisiana site detected the waves first and the Washington state detector picked up the signal 1.1 millisec- onds later. Scientists can use the timing difference to calculate a rough idea of where the black holes merger occurred.

Scientists say the second detection confirms that pairs of black holes are relatively common.

"Now that we are able to detect gravitatio­nal waves, they are going to be a phenomenal source of new informatio­n about our galaxy and an entirely new channel for discoverie­s about the universe," Pennsylvan­ia State University astrophysi­cist Chad Hanna said.

The research, presented at the American Astronomic­al Society meeting in San Diego, will be published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka