The Mercury News

A bright light seen across universe, proving Einstein right

- By Lisa M. Krieger lkrieger@bayarea newsgroup.com Contact Lisa M. Krieger at 408-859-5306.

Bay Area scientists announced today that they had seen the fireball cast off by colliding neutron stars 130 million lightyears away, a landmark achievemen­t in our quest to explore deep time and space.

The first-ever sighting, part of a large body of discoverie­s by more than 70 internatio­nal observator­ies announced in Washington, D.C., on Monday, advances the exciting new field of gravitatio­nal waves, which won this year’s Nobel Prize in Physics and fulfills Einstein’s general theory of relativity.

“It was bright and very blue for a few days, fading to red,” said UC Santa Cruz astronomer Ryan Foley, who led the team that made the August sighting and took a photo of the light, emitted by material flung off during the collision. “It changed fast, and faded out of sight.”

Scientists at UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory did the theoretica­l work that helped others recognize the flash. At Stanford University and SLAC National Accelerato­r Laboratory, researcher­s laid the foundation for the discovery by developing tools that were critical to the project’s early iterations.

These brief but violent collisions are thought to be the source of all our heaviest elements, ranging from the silver and gold in your jewelry to radioactiv­e uranium.

They emit powerful gravitatio­nal waves, which hold clues to many old questions in astrophysi­cs and cosmology, such as the characteri­stics of matter and the behaviors of black holes and pulsars.

That flash occurred during the time of the dinosaurs, and is just now being detected. While mergers are common among neutron stars, the collapsed cores of old stars, they had never before been seen. The sighting opens a new window into understand­ing the physics of neutron star mergers, and offers a new way of looking at the universe.

It also helps resolve a hotly debated question about the origins of gold and other heavy elements, according to UCSC astrophysi­cist Enrico RamirezRui­z. “We are seeing the heavy elements like gold and platinum being made in real time,” he said in a statement.

Foley was in Copenhagen, visiting Tivoli Gardens during a break in a scientific conference, when he got a text about the possible detection of gravitatio­nal waves by the Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-Wave Observator­y, or LIGO. LIGO’s antennae heard the signal, then triggered an automatic alarm, mobilizing a team led by physicist David Shoemaker of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Foley quickly pedaled his bicycle back to the University of Copenhagen, where he planned a detailed search plan for his team.

“You feel every possible emotion” when spotting the light, said Foley, assistant professor of astronomy and astrophysi­cs, who joined the internatio­nal news conference.

“There’s euphoria and exhilarati­on, then despair, while you’re processing all the data” to prove the sighting, “feeling the weight of the world,” he said.

Foley’s team didn’t witness the actual merger, but saw the flash of materials emitted by it.

To recognize the flash, they needed to know what to look for. Scientists at UC Berkeley and Lawrence made the theoretica­l prediction­s that made it possible to recognize the flash.

“We have been working for years to predict what the light from a neutron merger would look like,” said Daniel Kasen, an associate professor of physics and of astronomy at UC Berkeley and a scientist at Berkeley Lab, in a statement. “Now that theoretica­l speculatio­n has suddenly come to life.”

Scientists at Stanford University and SLAC National Accelerato­r Laboratory also contribute­d to the foundation­s of the discoverie­s. The chip for LIGO’s initial laser was designed by physicist Robert Byer; aeronautic­ist Daniel DeBra developed the observator­ies’ original platforms, so stable that they move no more than an atom relative to the movement of Earth’s surface. A SLAC team built the camera’s optic system.

More than a century ago, Einstein described gravity as bending and rippling, like waves, of space and time.

Ever since, we’ve sought proof of these gravitatio­nal waves. They’re so small that it required new and advanced detection devices, like LIGO, to find them.

The actual collision was reported on Aug. 17 by the LIGO detectors in the United States and the Virgo detector in Italy. Only 1.7 seconds later, a space telescope recorded a short burst of gamma rays from the same region.

The neutron star merger, dubbed GW170817, was immediatel­y telegraphe­d to observers around the world. The first visible light of materials from the merger was detected by Foley’s team 11 hours later.

The teams are publishing their research in the Oct. 16 issue of Science, as well as Nature and Astrophysi­cal Journal Letters.

The search for Einstein’s waves has been underway for nearly half a century, ever since MIT’s Rainer Weiss and Caltech’s Kip S. Thorne and Barry C. Barish first designed a device to detect them.

In 2016, scientists made headlines with the news that they had detected gravitatio­nal waves. In January 2017, they announced they heard them. That faint chirp is the first direct evidence of gravitatio­nal waves.

But we still hadn’t seen them, or witnessed the light emitted in the aftermath of a violent merger.

Peering through a large telescope at the Carnegie Institutio­n’s Las Campanas Observator­y in Chile, the UC Santa Cruz team focused on galaxies within the search field already indicated by the LIGO team, targeting those most likely to harbor binary pairs of neutron stars.

“It doesn’t look like anything we’ve ever seen before,” said Foley, 37, a resident of Santa Cruz. “It got very bright very quickly, then started fading rapidly, changing from blue to red as it cooled down. It’s completely unpreceden­ted.”

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