Kuwait Times

Neutron star smash-up the ‘discovery of a lifetime’

Evidence of this cosmic clash hurtled through space

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PARIS: “Truly a eureka moment”, “Everything I ever hoped for”, “A dream come true” — Normally restrained scientists reached for the stars Monday to describe the feelings that accompany a “once-in-a-lifetime” event. The trigger for this meteor shower of superlativ­es was the smash-up of two unimaginab­ly dense neutron stars 130 million years ago, when T-rex still lorded over our planet.

Evidence of this cosmic clash hurtled through space and reached Earth on August 17 at exactly 12:41 GMT, setting in motion a secret, sleepless, weeks-long blitzkrieg of star-gazing and numbercrun­ching involving hundreds of telescopes and thousands of astronomer­s and astrophysi­cists around the world. It was as if a dormant network of super-spies simultaneo­usly sprung into action.

The stellar smash-up made itself known in two ways: it created ripples called gravitatio­nal waves in Einstein’s time-space continuum, and lit up the entire electromag­netic spectrum of light, from gamma rays to radio waves. Scientists had detected gravitatio­nal waves four times before, a feat acknowledg­ed with a Nobel Physics Prize earlier this month. But each of those events, generated by the collision of black holes, lasted just a few seconds, and remained invisible to Earth- and space-based telescopes. The neutron star collision was different. It generated gravitatio­nal waves — picked up by two US-based observator­ies known as LIGO, and another one in Italy called Virgo — that lasted an astounding 100 seconds. Less than two seconds later, a NASA satellite recorded a burst of gamma rays.

A true ‘eureka’ moment

This set off a mad dash to locate what was almost certainly the single source for both. “It is the first time that we’ve observed a cataclysmi­c astrophysi­cal event in both gravitatio­nal and electromag­netic waves,” said LIGO executive director David Reitze, a professor at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in Pasadena

Initial calculatio­ns had narrowed the zone to a patch of sky in the southern hemisphere spanning five or six galaxies, but frustrated astronomer­s had to wait for nightfall to continue the search. Finally, at around 2200 GMT, a telescope array in the northern desert of Chile nailed it: the stellar merger had taken place in a galaxy known as NGC 4993. Stephen Smartt, who led observatio­ns for the European Space Observator­y’s New Technology Telescope, was gobsmacked when the spectrum lit up his screens. “I had never seen anything like it,” he recalled. Scientists everywhere were stunned.

“This event was truly a eureka moment,” said Bangalore Sathyaprak­ash, head of the Gravitatio­nal Physics Group at Cardiff University. “The 12 hours that followed are inarguably the most exciting of my scientific life.” “There are rare occasions when a scientist has the chance to witness a new era at its beginning — this is one such time,” said Elena Pian, an astronomer at the National Institute for Astrophysi­cs in Rome. LIGOaffili­ated astronomer­s at Caltech had spent decades preparing for the off chance — calculated at 80,000-to-one odds — of witnessing a neutron star merger.

Don’t tell your friends

“On that morning, all of our dreams came true,” said Alan Weinstein, head of astrophysi­cal data analysis for LIGO at Caltech. “This discovery was everything I always hoped for, packed into a single event,” added Francesco Pannarale, an astrophysi­cist at Cardiff University in Wales. For these and thousands of other scientists, GW170817 — the neutron star burst’s tag — will become a “do you remember where you were?” kind of moment.

“I was sitting in my dentist’s chair when I got the text message,” said Benoit Mours, an astrophysi­cist at France’s National Centre for Research and the French coordinato­r for Virgo. “I jumped up and rushed to my lab.” Patrick Sutton, head of the gravitatio­nal physics group at Cardiff and a member of the LIGO team, was stuck on a long-haul bus, struggling to download hundreds of emails crowding his inbox.

Rumors swirled within and beyond the astronomy community as scientists hastened to prepare initial findings for publicatio­n Monday in a dozen articles spread across several of the world’s leading journals. “There have been quite a few pints and glasses of wine or bubbly — privately, of course, because we haven’t been allowed to tell anyone,” Sutton told AFP. But he couldn’t resist telling his 12-year-old son, an aspiring physicist. “He’s sworn to secrecy though. He’s not allowed to tell his friends.” — AFP

The chance to witness a new era at its beginning

 ??  ?? This handout image obtained from the European Southern Observator­y on October 16, 2017 is an artist’s impression showing two tiny but very dense neutron stars at the point at which they merge and explode as a kilonova. — AFP
This handout image obtained from the European Southern Observator­y on October 16, 2017 is an artist’s impression showing two tiny but very dense neutron stars at the point at which they merge and explode as a kilonova. — AFP
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