AM24 Public Lecture - The Shaking Cosmos: Observing the Universe in Gravitational Waves with LISA

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • Virtually everything we know about the Universe has been discovered from the study of photons --- light in all its myriad forms from radio waves, to visible light, to x-rays and beyond. At the dawn of the 21st century, advanced technology is providing access to the Cosmos through detection of subatomic particles like cosmic rays and neutrinos, and through detection of ripples in the fabric of spacetime itself.
    These ripples in spacetime, called gravitational waves, carry information not in the form of light or particles, but in the form of gravity itself. Gravitational waves are messengers which carry the stories of what happens when two black holes collide at the centers of galaxies, of how the compact stars fall into monstrous black holes, and of how the graveyard of the galaxy is filled with the quiet whisper of binary white dwarf stars that spiral together ever so slowly as they fade into oblivion.
    This talk explores the modern description of gravity, what gravitational waves are and how we hope to measure them, and what we hope to learn from their detection. It focuses on the forthcoming space gravitational wave observatory, LISA, being launched in the early 2030s by ESA and NASA. Gravity has a story to tell, and in this talk, it explores some of the discoveries we hope to make.
    Presenter: Shane L Larson (Northwestern University)

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