UCL

Cosmological significance and Detection of Gravitational Waves - audio

Categories

Astronomy, Science

Number of episodes

1

Published on

2010-03-22 13:40:00

Language

English

Cosmological significance and Detection of Gravitational Waves - audio

What’s This Podcast
About?

Gravitational waves - a prediction of Einstein's General Relativity - are among the most elusive signals incident on the Earth. These signals - ripples in the curvature of space-time - carry information about what is happening deep in the heart of some of the most violent events in the Universe. However their observation remains one of the most challenging problems in experimental astro-physics, as the measurement sensitivity required by the detectors is equivalent to measuring a change in the separation of the Earth and Sun by the diameter of an atom. A global network of such detectors - LIGO, Virgo and GEO - is now in operation, with enhanced versions being developed, and a space-borne detector, LISA, is planned as a joint ESA/NASA mission. In this talk, Professor Hough will discuss the nature of gravitational waves, their cosmological significance, how the detectors work, and the preliminary results which are already showing promise.

Podcast Urls

Podcast Copyright

2020 University College London

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