Source - http://www.theregister.co.uk/
By - Richard Chirgwin
Category - Golf Resort In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
By - Richard Chirgwin
Category - Golf Resort In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Golf Resort In Miami |
While the world looks for ways to directly observe gravity waves,
boffins at Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation (CSIRO) say they've used information about the Einsteinian
prediction to examine huge black holes.
In what they call a “new
chapter in astronomy”, post-doctoral CSIRO fellow Dr Ryan Shannon and
PhD student Vikram Ravi believe they've worked out the likely – and low –
rate of background gravitational waves in the universe.
They've done this by examining data from the Parkes
radio-telescope's PPTA (Parkes Pulsar Timing Array) project which, along
with a previous CSIRO-Swinburne University collaboration provides 20
years' worth of pulsar timing data.
The timing of pulsar signals
is extremely precise, the researchers say, but as a gravitational wave
passes the pulsar's region, it would swell or shrink distances in that
region, changing the timing of the pulse from Earth's point of view.
“The
strength of the gravitational wave background depends on how often
supermassive black holes spiral together and merge, how massive they
are, and how far away they are. So if the background is low, that puts a
limit on one or more of those factors,” CSIRO says in its media release.
As
a result, the group believes one model used to explain supermassive
black holes, galactic merger, should be discarded because it doesn't
explain enough of the mass of black holes. The timing data will next be
used to test other models of supermassive black hole growth.
Project
leader, CSIRO's Dr George Hobbs, believes the timing data will one day
allow direct detection of gravitational waves. “We haven't yet detected
gravitational waves outright, but we're now into the right ballpark to
do so,” he says.
He explained that combining pulsar-timing data
from Parkes with that from other telescopes in Europe and the USA — a
total of about 50 pulsars — should provide enough accuracy to detect
gravitational waves “within ten years”.

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