LIGO PROJECT- SCI & TECH

News: Gravitational wave detector LIGO is back online after 3 years of upgrades

 

What is in the news?

       Recently, After a three-year hiatus, scientists in the U.S. have just turned on detectors capable of measuring gravitational waves – tiny ripples in space itself that travel through the universe.

 

Key takeaways from the news:

       Since 2020, the Laser Interferometric Gravitational-Wave Observatory – commonly known as LIGO – has been sitting dormant while it underwent some exciting upgrades.

       These improvements will significantly boost the sensitivity of LIGO and should allow the facility to observe more-distant objects that produce smaller ripples in spacetime.

 

Multi messenger astronomy:

       By detecting more events that create gravitational waves, there will be more opportunities for astronomers to observe the light produced by those same events.

       Seeing an event through multiple channels of information, an approach called multi-messenger astronomy, provides astronomers rare and coveted opportunities to learn about physics far beyond the realm of any laboratory testing.

 

Theory of general relativity:

       According to Einstein’s theory of general relativity, mass and energy warp the shape of space and time. The bending of spacetime determines how objects move in relation to one another – what people experience as gravity.

 

Gravitational waves:

       Gravitational waves are created when massive objects like black holes or neutron stars merge with one another, producing sudden, large changes in space.

       The process of space warping and flexing sends ripples across the universe like a wave across a still pond.

       These waves travel out in all directions from a disturbance, minutely bending space as they do so and ever so slightly changing the distance between objects in their way.

       A strong gravitational wave passing through the Milky Way may only change the diameter of the entire galaxy by three feet (one meter).

 

Laser Interferometer Gravitational Observations:

       LIGO comprises two separate observatories, with one located in Hanford, Washington, and the other in Livingston, Louisiana.

       Each observatory is shaped like a giant L with two, 2.5-mile-long (four-kilometer-long) arms extending out from the center of the facility at 90 degrees to each other.

       It was joined by Virgo and a new Japanese observatory – the Kamioka Gravitational Wave Detector, or KAGRA.

 

LIGO India project:

About:

       The project aims to detect gravitational waves from the universe.

       The Indian LIGO would have two perpendicularly placed 4-km long vacuum chambers, that constitute the most sensitive interferometers in the world.

       It is expected to begin scientific runs from 2030.

 

Location:

       Maharashtra

 

Build by:

       It will be built by the Department of Atomic Energy and the Department of Science and Technology, with a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the National Science Foundation, the US.