Advertisement

Scientists strike gold with gravitational waves

For the first time scientists have detected gravitational waves, the ripples in space and time predicted by Albert Einstein, with light from the same cosmic event. Three U.S. scientists who made that discovery were awarded the Nobel prize in physics earlier this month. The waves were caused by the collision of two extremely dense neutron stars some 130 million years ago which only reached earth on August 17th. We can convert the LIGO signals to sound as a way to understand #GW170817. Check this video out — https://t.co/eLnyAmWzNY— LIGO (LIGO) October 17, 2017 Scientists say precious and other heavy metals were blown into space by the aftermath of the merger of the stars. “In fact from the properties of the visible and infrared light, we conclude that the mass of all the heavy elements produced in this one single event is 16,000 times the mass of the Earth,” explained Edo Berger of Harvard University. “Of this material we estimate that about ten times the mass of the Earth is in gold and platinum alone.” One scientist described the discovery as the equivalent to the transition between looking at a black and white picture of a volcano to sitting in a 3D movie that shows the explosion of Mount Vesuvius. Astronomers have been trying to figure out how to detect these ripples for the last century, ever since they were first predicted by Albert Einstein in his theory of general relativity.