Download - LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

Transcript
Page 1: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the Universe

LIGO-GOxxxx

Barry C. BarishNational Science BoardLIGO Livingston, LA4-Feb-04

Page 2: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2

A Conceptual Problem is solved !Newton’s Theory

“instantaneous action at a distance”

Gµν= 8πΤµν

Einstein’s Theoryinformation carried

by gravitational radiation at the speed of light

Page 3: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 3

General RelativityEinstein theorized that smaller masses travel toward larger masses, not because they are "attracted" by a mysterious force, but because the smaller objects travel through space that is warped by the larger object

Imagine space as a stretched rubber sheet.

A mass on the surface will cause a deformation.

Another mass dropped onto the sheet will roll toward that mass.

Page 4: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 4

Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation

a necessary consequence of Special Relativity with its finite speed for information transfer

gravitational waves come from the acceleration of masses and propagate away from their sources as a space-time warpage at the speed of light

gravitational radiationbinary inspiral

of compact objects

Page 5: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 5

Detectors in space

LISA

Gravitational Wave Astrophysical Source

Terrestrial detectorsVirgo, LIGO, TAMA, GEO

AIGO

Detecting Gravitational Waves

Page 6: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 6

Frequency range for EM astronomy

Electromagnetic wavesover ~16 orders of magnitudeUltra Low Frequency radio waves to high energy gamma rays

Page 7: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 7

Frequency range of GW Astronomy

Gravitational wavesover ~8 orders of magnitudeTerrestrial + space detectors

Audio band

Space Terrestrial

Page 8: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 8

Detecting a passing wave ….

Free masses

Page 9: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 9

Detecting a passing wave ….

Interferometer

Page 10: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 10

Interferometer ConceptLaser used to measure relative lengths of two orthogonal arms

As a wave passes, the arm lengths change in different ways….

…causing the interference

pattern to change at the photodiode

Arms in LIGO are 4km Measure difference in length to one part in 1021 or 10-18 meters

SuspendedMasses

Page 11: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 11

Simultaneous DetectionLIGO

3002 km(L/c = 10 ms)

Hanford Observatory

Caltech

LivingstonObservatory

MIT

Page 12: LIGO -- Studying the Fabric of the UniverseUniverse LIGO-GOxxxx Barry C. Barish National Science Board LIGO Livingston, LA 4-Feb-04 17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 2 A Conceptual Problem

17-Feb-03 AAAS Annual Meeting 12

Gravitational Wave Astronomy

LIGOwill provide a new way to view the dynamics of the

Universe