âJust over a billion years ago, many millions of galaxies from here, a pair of black holes collided. They had been circling each other for aeons, in a sort of mating dance, gathering pace with each orbit, hurtling closer and closer. By the time they were a few hundred miles apart, they were whipping around at nearly the speed of light, releasing great shudders of gravitational energy. Space and time became distorted, like water at a rolling boil. In the fraction of a second that it took for the black holes to finally merge, they radiated a hundred times more energy than all the stars in the universe combined.â
âThey formed a new black hole, sixty-two times as heavy as our sun and almost as wide across as the state of Maine. As it smoothed itself out, assuming the shape of a slightly flattened sphere, a few last quivers of energy escaped. Then space and time became silent again.â
âThe waves rippled outward in every direction, weakening as they went. On Earth, dinosaurs arose, evolved, and went extinct. The waves kept going. About fifty thousand years ago, they entered our own Milky Way galaxy, just as Homo sapiens were beginning to replace our Neanderthal cousins as the planetâs dominant species of ape. A hundred years ago, Albert Einstein, one of the more advanced members of the species, predicted the wavesâ existence, inspiring decades of speculation and fruitless searching. Twenty-two years ago, construction began on an enormous detector, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). Then, on September 14, 2015, at just before eleven in the morning, Central European Time, the waves reached Earth. Marco Drago, a thirty-two-year-old Italian postdoctoral student and a member of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, was the first person to notice them. He was sitting in front of his computer at the Albert Einstein Institute, in Hannover, Germany, viewing the LIGO data remotely. The waves appeared on his screen as a compressed squiggle, but the most exquisite ears in the universe, attuned to vibrations of less than a trillionth of an inch, would have heard what astronomers call a chirpâa faint whooping from low to high. This morning, in a press conference in Washington, D.C., the LIGO team announced that the signal constitutes the first direct observation of gravitational waves.â
âLIGO is part of a larger effort to explore one of the more elusive implications of Einsteinâs general theory of relativity. The theory, put simply, states that space and time curve in the presence of mass, and that this curvature produces the effect known as gravity.â
âWhen two black holes orbit each other, they stretch and squeeze space-time like children running in circles on a trampoline, creating vibrations that travel to the very edge; these vibrations are gravitational waves.â
âThey pass through us all the time, from sources across the universe, but because gravity is so much weaker than the other fundamental forces of natureâelectromagnetism, for instance, or the interactions that bind an atom togetherâwe never sense them. Einstein thought it highly unlikely that they would ever be detected. He twice declared them nonexistent, reversing and then re-reversing his own prediction. A skeptical contemporary noted that the waves seemed to âpropagate at the speed of thought.ââ
âWeissâs detection method was altogether different from Weberâs. His first insight was to make the observatory âLâ-shaped. Picture two people lying on the floor, their heads touching, their bodies forming a right angle. When a gravitational wave passes through them, one person will grow taller while the other shrinks; a moment later, the opposite will happen. As the wave expands space-time in one direction, it necessarily compresses it in the other. Weissâs instrument would gauge the difference between these two fluctuating lengths, and it would do so on a gigantic scale, using miles of steel tubing. âI wasnât going to be detecting anything on my tabletop,â he said.â
âTo achieve the necessary precision of measurement, Weiss suggested using light as a ruler. He imagined putting a laser in the crook of the âL.â It would send a beam down the length of each tube, which a mirror at the other end would reflect back. The speed of light in a vacuum is constant, so as long as the tubes were cleared of air and other particles the beams would recombine at the crook in synchronyâunless a gravitational wave happened to pass through. In that case, the distance between the mirrors and the laser would change slightly. Since one beam would now be covering a shorter distance than its twin, they would no longer be in lockstep by the time they got back. The greater the mismatch, the stronger the wave. Such an instrument would need to be thousands of times more sensitive than any previous device, and it would require delicate tuning in order to extract a signal of vanishing weakness from the planetâs omnipresent din.â
âRich Isaacson, a program officer at the N.S.F. at the time, was instrumental in getting the observatory off the ground. âHe and the National Science Foundation stuck with us and took this enormous risk,â Weiss said.
âIt never should have been built,â Isaacson told me. âIt was a couple of maniacs running around, with no signal ever having been discovered, talking about pushing vacuum technology and laser technology and materials technology and seismic isolation and feedback systems orders of magnitude beyond the current state of the art, using materials that hadnât been invented yet.â But Isaacson had written his Ph.D. thesis on gravitational radiation, and he was a firm believer in LIGOâs theoretical underpinnings. âI was a mole for the gravitational-wave community inside the N.S.F.,â he said.â
âIt took years to make the most sensitive instrument in history insensitive to everything that is not a gravitational wave. Emptying the tubes of air demanded forty days of pumping. The result was one of the purest vacuums ever created on Earth, a trillionth as dense as the atmosphere at sea level. Still, the sources of interference were almost beyond reckoningâthe motion of the wind in Hanford, or of the ocean in Livingston; imperfections in the laser light as a result of fluctuations in the power grid; the jittering of individual atoms within the mirrors; distant lightning storms. All can obscure or be mistaken for a gravitational wave, and each source had to be eliminated or controlled for. One of LIGOâs systems responds to minuscule seismic tremors by activating a damping system that pushes on the mirrors with exactly the right counterforce to keep them steady; another monitors for disruptive sounds from passing cars, airplanes, or wolves.â
ââThere are ten thousand other tiny things, and I really mean ten thousand,â Weiss said. âAnd every single one needs to be working correctly so that nothing interferes with the signal.â When his colleagues make adjustments to the observatoryâs interior components, they must set up a portable clean room, sterilize their tools, and don what they call bunny suitsâfull-body protective gearâlest a skin cell or a particle of dust accidentally settle on the sparkling optical hardware.â
âThe team has also been able to quantify what is known as the ringdownâthe three bursts of energy that the new, larger black hole gave off as it became spherical. âSeeing the ringdown is spectacular,â Levin said. It offers confirmation of one of relativity theoryâs most important predictions about black holesânamely, that they radiate away imperfections in the form of gravitational waves after they coalesce.â
âThe detection also proves that Einstein was right about yet another aspect of the physical universe. Although his theory deals with gravity, it has primarily been tested in our solar system, a place with a notably weak gravitational regime. âYou think Earthâs gravity is really something when youâre climbing the stairs,â Weiss said. âBut, as far as physics goes, it is a pipsqueak, infinitesimal, tiny little effect.â Near a black hole, however, gravity becomes the strongest force in the universe, capable of tearing atoms apart. Einstein predicted as much in 1916, and the LIGO results suggest that his equations align almost perfectly with real-world observation. âHow could he have ever known this?â Weiss asked. âI would love to present him with the data that I saw that morning, to see his face.ââ
âAs it happens, the particular frequencies of the waves that LIGO can detect fall within the range of human hearing, between about thirty-five and two hundred and fifty hertz. The chirp was much too quiet to hear by the time it reached Earth, and LIGO was capable of capturing only two-tenths of a second of the black holesâ multibillion-year merger, but with some minimal audio processing the event sounds like a glissando. âUse the back of your fingers, the nails, and just run them along the piano from the lowest A up to middle C, and youâve got the whole signal,â Weiss said.â
âDifferent celestial sources emit their own sorts of gravitational waves, which means that LIGO and its successors could end up hearing something like a cosmic orchestra. âThe binary neutron stars are like the piccolos,â Reitze said. Isolated spinning pulsars, he added, might make a monochromatic âdingâ like a triangle, and black holes would fill in the string section, running from double bass on up, depending on their mass. LIGO, he said, will only ever be able to detect violins and violas; waves from supermassive black holes, like the one at the center of the Milky Way, will have to await future detectors, with different sensitivities.â
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