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May 28, 2025

The importance of gravitational waves

An artists impression of two black holes spiraling towards each other, creating ripples in the fabric of spacetime. Credit: R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)
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An artists impression of two black holes spiraling towards each other, creating ripples in the fabric of spacetime. Credit: R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)

In 2015, a piece of equipment at an observatory in the US moved one quintillionth (10-18) of a meter. This tiny movement was the first recorded event of gravitational waves. And it helped confirm Einstein's theory of general relativity.

In 1916, Albert Einstein published his revolutionary theory of general relativity. It unraveled everything we thought we knew about gravity. He theorized that gravity results from a curve in , the stretchy four-dimensional stage in which we exist—three dimensions of space and one of time.

Large masses like the sun and Earth can curve and stretch spacetime.

Put a rock on a trampoline and a toy car on the edge. The car rolls towards the rock—just like people are pulled toward Earth's center.

Gravity isn't a force, as we'd always thought. It's the shape of the spacetime around us.

When an object with a high mass moves through spacetime, it carves out ripples—like a boat cutting through water.

and are among the densest stellar objects. When they spin or collide, they create . These waves spread out and travel through the universe.

By the time reach us, they are so small that we need extremely sensitive equipment to detect them.

Gravity is the result of curved spacetime from large solar masses. Credit: OpenStax University Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics,
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Gravity is the result of curved spacetime from large solar masses. Credit: OpenStax University Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics,

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Measuring space

On a vast, open plain in the state of Washington in the US lies the world's largest gravitational wave observatory. It lives at the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO).

Gravitational waves are measured with a device called an interferometer.

LIGO's interferometer is a shed with two 4km perpendicular arms jutting out and uses lasers and mirrors to detect gravitational waves.

When a gravitational wave passes through the interferometer, ripples cause spacetime to stretch and shrink.

In September 2015, the arms on LIGO's interferometer moved. Somewhere in the universe, millions of light years away, two black holes had slammed into one another.

Their gravitational waves found the arms on the interferometer—the of this kind and proof of Einstein's theory of .

Sharing secrets from across the cosmos

Gravitational wave research continues to uncover the secrets of some of the most violent events in the universe, including the catastrophic collisions of and .

Researchers worldwide, including in Perth, are improving the sensitivity of the detectors.

One day, we might be able to observe smaller events like supernovae or the (remnants of the Big Bang). These tiny messenger waves hurtle through space and help us understand our universe.

Knowing where we came from can help us predict where we're headed.

Provided by Particle

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Gravitational waves, first directly detected in 2015, confirm general relativity by revealing ripples in spacetime caused by massive objects like black holes and neutron stars. Detected using highly sensitive interferometers, these waves provide insights into extreme cosmic events and may eventually allow observation of phenomena such as supernovae and the cosmic microwave background.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.