First Detection of Gravitational Waves Produced by Colliding Neutron Stars
For the first time, scientists have directly detected gravitational waves — ripples in space and time — in addition to light from the spectacular collision of two neutron stars. This marks the first time that a cosmic event has been observed in both gravitational waves and light.
NSF News Release (Oct. 16, 2017)
Archive of Monday, Oct. 16 press conference webcast
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NSF Media Advisory
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First Detection of Gravitational Waves Announced
NSF’s funding of LIGO and the science behind its operation and research began in the 1970s. On Feb. 11, 2016, LIGO scientists announced their findings at a press conference organized by NSF. With representation from LIGO’s many international partners and more than 1,000 collaborators, the historic announcement was webcast around the world. This discovery offers new scientific capability to observe and study our universe, much like the advent of radio astronomy or even when Galileo first used a telescope to view the night skies.
NSF News Release (Feb. 11, 2016)
NSB Statement
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Background: Einstein himself questioned whether we could ever create an instrument sensitive enough to capture this phenomenon. Approximately 40 years ago, NSF joined this quest and began funding the science and technological innovation that led to detecting gravitational waves.
Additional LIGO News:
Gravitational waves detected from second pair of colliding black holes
(Jun. 15, 2016) NSF News Release
LIGO and Virgo observatories jointly detect black hole collision
(Sept. 27, 1017) NSF News Release
NSF-funded LIGO pioneers named 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics laureates
(Oct. 3, 2017) NSF News Release
LIGO detects third black hole merger
(Jun. 1, 2017) NSF Press Statement
Scientists to discuss new developments in gravitational-wave astronomy
(Oct. 11, 2017) NSF Media Advisory
Gallery
LIGO will unveil information about the most violent phenomena in our distant universe, such as supernovae explosions or colliding black holes. The detection reported on at the press conference, in fact, sheds light on two merging black holes 1.3 billion lightyears away.
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Related links
LIGO Scientific Collaboration
Advanced LIGO
LIGO Caltech
GEO600
Virgo Collaboration
Source: NSF News
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