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Double Pulsar Discovered

jabberjaw writes "Nature is reporting that a set of two pulsars could be emitting gravitational waves. Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves in his general theory of relativity, but a gravitational wave has yet to be detected. Find out more about gravitational waves and pulsars at Eric Weisstein's World of Physics."

4 of 293 comments (clear)

  1. Yes by rebelcool · · Score: 5, Informative
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  2. Actually not yet, but... by UPAAntilles · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's a cool kid's site that has some animations

    It's for the LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna). Space.com did a story on it a little while back, and it was in a Scientific American, but I'm not sure which, I have too many lying around. Unfortunantly, it doesn't launch until 2009.

  3. Re:Speed of Gravity by sahrss · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can also download the entire thing if you like. I just spent 15 minutes digging all this up, figured I might save someone else that time.
    Some previous Slashdotters showed us how (first link is to the highest quality download).

    I got it to work fine with this (remove the spaces!):
    curl "http://a768.g.akamai.net/5/768/142/3f9e9589/1a1a1 afb6ae049ae214fc034aad839a91985ea187bea5786f362d84 1a61948bf2688f01f87fb6fdf0e7ceb61c22186fb/nova_eu_ 30[12-14]c[01-08]_mp4_300.mov" -o universe#1_#2.mov

  4. Re:Speed of Gravity by TexVex · · Score: 5, Informative

    When calculating the orbits of celestial bodies, it is necessary to assume that gravity is instantaneous. When an object moves, its gravity appears to move with it instantly. The earth appears to orbit the Sun's present position rather than where the sun appears to be due to speed-of-light delay.

    As I understand it, though, there are two ways to look at it. The Earth is approximately 8 light-minutes from the Sun. The Earth is either orbiting the Sun's actual position, or it's orbiting a point that would be about eight minutes in front of the Sun's extrapolated path based on its position and momentum at that given instant.

    It comes down to a question of whether or not gravity is a field or a particle. If it's a particle, then it must travel at some unimaginable speed. If it's a field then it would share some of the properties (like velocity and direction) of the object that generates it, and changes to the field would propagate outward from the object at the speed of light. These changes to an object's field of gravity are thought to produce "gravity waves" that have yet to be detected.

    I could very well be muddled on this subject but I have done some reading on it. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

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