Brazilians Integrate Consortium That Detected Gravitational Waves and Black Holes
Hello
reader!
It
follows an article published on day (03/09) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that Brazilians integrate consortium that detected Gravitational
Waves and Black Holes.
Duda
Falcão
NEWS
Brazilians
Integrate Consortium That
Detected Gravitational Waves and Black Holes
By Elton Alisson
Agência FAPESP
March 09, 2016
(Image: LIGO)
Discoveries open up new prospects for the study of the
universe.
Brazilian researchers' participation in the international
collaboration
is supported by FAPESP.
|
After a series
of rumors in recent months, an international consortium of scientists that
includes researchers from Brazil confirmed on February 11 the first direct
detection of gravitational waves, created by two black holes as they collided
and merged. Gravitational waves are ripples in the fabric of spacetime that
were predicted by Albert Einstein (1879-1955) a century ago.
The
announcement was made by scientists from the Laser Interferometer
Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) at a press conference hosted by the US
National Science Foundation (NSF) in Washington, DC, and in an article
published by the journal Physical Review Letters.
More than
1,000 scientists affiliated with 90 universities and research institutions in
15 countries in addition to the United States are involved in the LIGO
Scientific Collaboration (LSC).
The
participants include Odylio Denys de Aguiar, Marcio Constâncio Júnior, César Augusto Costa, Allan Douglas dos Santos Silva, Elvis Camilo Ferreira
and Marcos André Okada, all six of whom are affiliated with Brazil’s National
Space Research Institute (INPE), and Riccardo Sturani, a researcher at São Paulo State
University’s Institute of Theoretical Physics (IFT-UNESP).
The
researchers from Brazil participate in the LSC through projects supported by
FAPESP.
“Ladies and
gentlemen, we have detected gravitational waves. We did it,” announced David
Reitze, LIGO’s executive director, at the press conference.
Using LIGO’s
two widely separated identical detector sites working in unison as a single
“observatory”, one in Livingston, Louisiana, and the other 3,000 km away in
Hanford, Washington state, the researchers said they observed gravitational
waves produced by a cataclysmic event, named GW 150914, in a galaxy more than 1
billion light years from Earth.
The
gravitational waves were detected on September 14, 2015, at 5:51 a.m. EDT (6:51
Brasília time).
The scientists
concluded that the detected gravitational waves were produced during the final
fraction of a second of the merger of two black holes spinning around each
other like tops. The collision and merger created a single more massive black
hole, irradiating energy as gravitational waves.
The
disturbance the antennas picked up was converted by LIGO researchers into sound
waves, producing a now famous “chirp”. The shape of such signals created by the
rise and fall in frequency and amplitude of the waveforms can be used to
discern the size and mass of black holes, helping to determine how strong the
event was at its source.
During the
final milliseconds of the black hole merger, the researchers estimated that the
peak energy radiated by the gravitational waves was 10 times greater than the
combined power of the light radiated by all the stars in the observable
universe.
“It's the
first time the universe has spoken to us through gravitational waves,” Reitze
said, adding that the two black holes were only about 150 km across and had
similar masses, weighing at 36 times and 29 times the mass of the Sun. “As they
get closer and closer together, they merge, and there’s this burst of
gravitational waves that travels for 1.3 billion years.”
Detection System
Gravitational
waves are caused by some of the most violent phenomena in the cosmos, such as
collisions and mergers of massive compact stars. Their existence was predicted
by Albert Einstein in 1916 on the basis of his theory of general relativity.
Einstein
postulated that accelerating massive objects would shake spacetime so much that
waves of distorted space would radiate from the source. These ripples in the
gravitational field, or gravitational waves, travel through the universe at the
speed of light, bearing information about their origins as well as valuable
clues to the nature of gravity itself.
To detect
gravitational waves directly as they arrive here on Earth, however, the
scientists measured a distance between detector observations equivalent to
about one-thousandth the diameter of a proton.
Laser
interferometry, the technique they used to detect the gravitational waves and
locate their sources, measures the difference between observations by detectors
placed very far apart. LIGO’s detectors were developed and are operated by the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the California Institute of
Technology (Caltech), both in the US.
“This first
detection of gravitational waves opens up a new window for observation of the
universe and marks the onset of a new era of research in astronomy and
astrophysics,” said César Augusto Costa, a researcher at INPE.
Aguiar’s
research group at INPE is working on upgrades to LIGO’s seismic isolation
system using chilled mirrors to counter the effect of vibrations and on
characterization of the detectors to identify and exclude sources of noise.
Sturani’s
group at IFT-UNESP is modeling and analyzing signal data from coalescing binary
systems. This work is important because gravitational waves interact very
weakly with matter, so that effective analytical techniques and precise
theoretical modeling of signals are required in addition to high-performance
detectors, Sturani explained.
“This first
detection of gravitational waves by LIGO is the result of observations made
between August and September of last year,” he said. “Collection of the last
set of data was completed in January, and the full analysis will be published
in April.”
In addition to
the article in Physical Review Letters, the researchers expect to
publish 12 other papers with results of the collaboration in the coming months.
The article
“Observation of Gravitational Waves from a Binary Black Hole Merger” (doi:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.061102) by LIGO Scientific
Collaboration & Virgo Collaboration can be read at http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.061102.
(Image:
NASA Ames Research Center/PRL)
(Photo:
NSF)
Aerial view of LIGO detector in Hanford, Washington.
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Source: English
WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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