Tuesday, 19 April 2016

Gravitational waves emitted by 2 black holes of nearly equal mass spiral together & merge


Gravitational waves emitted by 2 black holes of nearly equal mass spiral together & merge
The disturbance, produced by a pair of merging black holes, was captured by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) facilities in Hanford, Washington, and Livingston, Louisiana. This event marked the first-ever detection of gravitational waves and opens a new scientific window on how the universe works.

Less than half a second later, the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) on NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope picked up a brief, weak burst of high-energy light consistent with the same part of the sky. Analysis of this burst suggests just a 0.2-percent chance of simply being random coincidence. Gamma-rays arising from a black hole merger would be a landmark finding because black holes are expected to merge “cleanly,” without producing any sort of light.

Source and further reading:
http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2016/nasas-fermi-telescope-poised-to-pin-down-gravitational-wave-sources

Animation:
This visualization shows gravitational waves emitted by two black holes (black spheres) of nearly equal mass as they spiral together and merge. Yellow structures near the black holes illustrate the strong curvature of space-time in the region. Orange ripples represent distortions of space-time caused by the rapidly orbiting masses.

These distortions spread out and weaken, ultimately becoming gravitational waves (purple). The merger timescale depends on the masses of the black holes. For a system containing black holes with about 30 times the sun’s mass, similar to the one detected by LIGO in 2015, the orbital period at the start of the movie is just 65 milliseconds, with the black holes moving at about 15 percent the speed of light. 

Space-time distortions radiate away orbital energy and cause the binary to contract quickly. As the two black holes near each other, they merge into a single black hole that settles into its "ringdown" phase, where the final gravitational waves are emitted. For the 2015 LIGO detection, these events played out in little more than a quarter of a second. This simulation was performed on the Pleiades supercomputer at NASA's Ames Research Center.

Credits: NASA/J. Bernard Kelly (Goddard), Chris Henze (Ames) and Tim Sandstrom (CSC Government Solutions LLC)

#nasa   #LIGO   #gravitationalwaves   #space   #science

5 comments:

  1. Wow I didn't know about this gama ray part

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  2. I've done some calculations to understand the true scale of the phenomenon. It looks like two bodies 30 time the mass of the Sun complete an Earth orbit every 14 seconds, at the beginning of the simulation. That's POWER, brother.
    I think the space is so awesome, that its realities overwhelms our wildest imagination.
    Thank you for reminding us, Corina.

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  3. Viorel Racoviteanu - Avec plaisir 
    30 x sun mass? ummm...interesting, but considering the vastness of space...gasmic I'd say ;)

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  4. A billion suns would still just be a blip in the vast darkness of space. I'd like to know more about what we can't see than what we can

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  5. Wonderful Cosmos....! Thanks for sharing Miss Corina.... :-) ...

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