Scientists detect signals of gravitational waves

November 29, 2010 03:59 pm | Updated 04:00 pm IST - London,

Just as a boat sailing through the ocean produces waves in the water, moving masses like stars or black holes produce gravitational waves in the fabric of space-time.

Just as a boat sailing through the ocean produces waves in the water, moving masses like stars or black holes produce gravitational waves in the fabric of space-time.

Researchers have brought the world one step closer to ‘hearing’ gravitational waves — ripples in space and time predicted by Albert Einstein in the early 20th century.

The research, conducted at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) in California, tested a system of lasers that would fly aboard the proposed space mission called Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, or LISA.

The mission’s goal is to detect the subtle, whisper-like signals of gravitational waves, which have yet to be directly observed. This is no easy task and many challenges lie ahead, reports the journal Physical Review Letters.

Just as a boat sailing through the ocean produces waves in the water, moving masses like stars or black holes produce gravitational waves in the fabric of space-time.

A more massive moving object will produce more powerful waves, and objects that move very quickly will produce more waves over a certain time period.

The new JPL tests hit one significant milestone — demonstrating for the first time that noise or random fluctuations in LISA’s laser beams can be hushed enough to hear the sweet sounds of the elusive waves, according to a NASA statement.

“In order to detect gravitational waves, we have to make extremely precise measurements,” said Bill Klipstein, study co-author and physicist at JPL.

“Our lasers are much noisier than what we want to measure, so we have to remove that noise carefully to get a clear signal. It’s a little like listening for a feather to drop in the middle of a heavy rainstorm.”

The JPL team is one of many groups working on LISA, a joint European Space Agency and NASA mission proposal, which would launch in 2020 or later, if selected.

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