News on Astrophysics
- The highest energy cosmic ray burst does not come from
- CERN: Neutrinos are not faster than ligth after all
- New neutrino measurements
- CERN measurement of the antihydrogen spectrum
- There is no "empty space" in the universe
- Hints of Higgs particles from Cern
- Promising puzzle piece for confirming dark matter now seems unlikely
- 3 new elements have been named
- LHC proton run for 2011 reaches successful conclusion
- Crab pulsar beams energy beyond theoretical limit
- Attempts to "hear" gravitional waves
- Gamma-Ray Bursts shed light on dark energy
- A complete 2year mapping of the X-ray sky
- News from the CERN LHC
- Update from LHC: A hint of the Hiccs particle
- Major step forward towards detecting gravitational waves
- Galaxy sized twist in time pulls violating particles back into line
- GRB's challenges physics beyond Einstein
- One neutrino mystery solved
- Potential new cancer treatment from black hole discovery
- How to spot a spinning black hole: Twisted space-time should be visible from Earth
- Study predicts distribution of gravitational wave sources
- Lights on merging supermassive black holes
- Re-cunstructing the last cry from a black hole
- Dark matter detection in a mine
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Attempts to "hear" gravitional waves
Wednesday, 05 October 2011 12:14
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| Astronomy - Astrophysics |
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Scientists are building detectors all over the world, to transform the entire earth into a large antenna to "hear" gravitional waves from distant collisions of compact bodies
Albert Einstein predicted gravitational waves in 1918. Today, almost 100 years later, advanced gravitational wave detectors are being constructed in the US, Europe, Japan and Australia to search for them. While any motion produces gravitational waves, a signal loud enough to be detected requires the motion of huge masses at extreme velocities. The prime candidate sources are mergers of two neutron stars: two bodies, each with a mass comparable to the mass of our sun, spiraling around each other and merging at a velocity close to the speed of light. Source: Hebrew University of Jerusalem |




