One of the two tunnels that make up LIGO based in Hanford, Washington. On Monday, theoretical physicist Laurence Krauss sent the scientific community on Twitter reeling when he suggested that researchers may have detected, for the first time, an astrophysical phenomenon called gravitational waves. Right now, the rumor is just that. The scientists to which the rumor refers work at the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and told Business Insider that there is no basis for such a claim, yet. "We are still taking data, and we won't finish analyzing and reviewing results until at least a month or two later," Gabriela Gonzalez, LIGO spokesperson and Louisiana State University physics and astronomy professor, told Business Insider.
She added: "The instruments are working great, but ... I don't have any news with analysis results to share, yet."
But what if the rumor turns out to be real? Well, the prospect of what that would mean for science is what earned Krauss' twits 4,250% more retweets than his usual 40 or so — overnight.What are gravitational waves and why do they matter?
Albert Einstein first predicted the existence of gravitational waves in 1916. According to his theory of general relativity, a number of incredibly powerful cosmic systems across the universe will generate measurable ripples in the fabric of space-time called gravitational waves.
One example is two black holes orbiting one another that are eventually destined to collide.
When a smaller black hole meets a
larger one, the two attract one another through tremendous
gravitational forces. As the smaller black hole inches toward its
invetiable doom, is accelerates through space at an ever-increasing rate
toward the larger black hole, and, in so doing, generates gravitational
waves.
Over 30 years ago, a pair of
scientists using the radio telescope in Puerto Rico made the first
indirect detection of gravitational waves by observing the behavior of a
distant pulsar binary — a pair of rapidly rotating neutron stars (the
densest objects in the universe next to black holes). This indirect
detection gave fuel for larger projects, like LIGO and the BICEP2
telescope.
In 2014, the BICEP2 team reported the discovery of gravitational waves, but the discovery was later disproved To this day, scientists have yet to confirm the existence of gravitational waves with direct, observational evidence, which is why projects like LIGO are so important.
"The detection of gravitational waves would be a game changer for astronomers in the field," Clifford Will, a distinguished profess of physics at the University of Florida who studied under famed astrophysicist Kip Thorne told business insider 2015. "We would be able to test aspects of general relativity that have not been tested."
Not only that, the ability to observe gravitational waves would open a whole new frontier of astronomy. The same way that astronomers today use light waves to study the universe, they could also use gravitational waves to see cosmic objects — such as colliding black holes — like never before.
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