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Gravity Wave Detector Ready For Business

Arthur Embleton writes "The BBC has an article about a Gravity Wave Detector. There are two L shaped set-ups. One in Washington, the other in Louisiana. They've got a Laser pointing at a mirror 4km away, watching for the reflection and if it is distorted then it shows that there has been a gravitational pulse, possibly by two Black Holes colliding. The detectors are apparently so accurate they can measure to one-thousandth of the width of a proton! How did they test that it works?"

2 of 53 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Doesn't matter by Mt._Honkey · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Millions of dollars in federal grant money later, do you think anyone gives a rat's ass?
    Don't bother us with details like "how do you verify that it's calibrated?". There's a board of directors who have pensions! Nice little retirement nesteggs!
    I know that this is a troll, but I am going to respond anyway. I know/work with physicists at Fermilab, and I can vouch for how hard these people work to make sure that everything works perfectly and that data generated is valid. They have teams of people checking to make sure that every assumption made is correct (I'm involved in one such group). Physicists like those at Fermilab, or LIGO, or other such facilities are among the most dedicated, competent people you will ever meet. They aren't there for the money, they are there for the science. Even after they "retire", many continue to work for decades for free. Physicists are there to get shit done, and I'm sure that their retirement benefit packages are not their primary motives.

    If that were the case, I doubt that they would have gone through 4 hard years of painful undergraduate courses, followed by even harder grad school, then working through a post-doc position... all to secure a good pension. People like that just go into business.

    They're in it for the hunt, the dream, the achievement... the advancement.

    --

    Don't Bogart the fish sticks
  2. Re:Insulation from vibrations noise... by Frans+Faase · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The idea is to find a place where there are not many fibrations and to make the system rigid. Movements parallel to the detector axis are (theoretically) not noticed. The remaining vibrations will simply make the instrument temporarily blind. That is no problem as long as they do not occur continiously. It is possible to distinguis between vibrations and changes in lenght. Using multiple instruments all over the world also helps distinquishing between local vibration events and globally caused changes in length due to gravational waves.