Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (5,049)
  • Business (313)
  • Career (4,285)
  • Climate (213)
  • Culture (4,251)
  • Education (4,467)
  • Finance (203)
  • Health (855)
  • Lifestyle (4,137)
  • Science (4,154)
  • Sports (314)
  • Tech (174)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

DOJ Scrubs Jan. 6 Attack From Court Record After Suspending Career Prosecutors

October 30, 2025

DHS vows to defend American culture from “Invasion,” alarming some Latinos : NPR

October 30, 2025

2025 Illinois Report Card provides glimpse of student progress

October 30, 2025

What happened to Nikola Topic? Oklahoma City Thunder guard reveals health scare

October 30, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    Honda, VW bracing for outage

    October 30, 2025

    Trump scores big wins on China trade deal during historic Asia trip

    October 30, 2025

    As battle for Ukraine’s Pokrovsk heats up, Putin touts nuclear-powered arms | Russia-Ukraine war News

    October 30, 2025

    What Trump and Xi agreed to in the U.S.-China trade truce

    October 30, 2025

    Ed Orgeron says he’s ‘one phone call away’ from returning to LSU

    October 30, 2025
  • Business

    Global Topic: Panasonic’s environmental solutions in China—building a sustainable business model | Business Solutions | Products & Solutions | Topics

    October 29, 2025

    Google Business Profile New Report Negative Review Extortion Scams

    October 23, 2025

    Land Topic is Everybody’s Business

    October 20, 2025

    Global Topic: Air India selects Panasonic Avionics’ Astrova for 34 widebody aircraft | Business Solutions | Products & Solutions | Topics

    October 19, 2025

    Business Engagement | IUCN

    October 14, 2025
  • Career

    DOJ Scrubs Jan. 6 Attack From Court Record After Suspending Career Prosecutors

    October 30, 2025

    Sun Community NewsLake George students explore pathways to future at Career JamLAKE GEORGE | Students from Lake George Jr.-Sr. High School recently attended the Career Jam event at Hudson Valley Community College's….15 hours ago

    October 30, 2025

    How DVR Helped Pivot One Man’s Career and another Man’s Business

    October 30, 2025

    Dairy Cows’ Second Career: Maximizing Cull Value & Welfare 🥩

    October 30, 2025

    Fredericktown grad chose family over college volleyball career

    October 30, 2025
  • Sports

    Raiders DE Maxx Crosby Weighs In on Sports’ Hottest Topic

    October 30, 2025

    Thunder’s Nikola Topic: Diagnosed with cancer

    October 30, 2025

    Raiders DE Maxx Crosby Weighs In on Sports’ Hottest Topic

    October 28, 2025

    Bye Week Off-Topic Thread – Yahoo Sports

    October 25, 2025

    This Thunder Rookie Guard Benefits from the Nikola Topic Injury

    October 23, 2025
  • Climate

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    October 26, 2025

    important environmental topics 2024| Statista

    October 21, 2025

    World BankDevelopment TopicsProvide sustainable food systems, water, and economies for healthy people and a healthy planet. Agriculture · Agribusiness and Value Chains · Climate-Smart….2 days ago

    October 20, 2025

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    October 17, 2025

    World Bank Group and the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution Process

    October 14, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    It is a hot topic as Grok and DeepSeek overwhelmed big tech AI models such as ChatGPT and Gemini in ..

    October 24, 2025

    Countdown to the Tech.eu Summit London 2025: Key Topics, Speakers, and Opportunities

    October 23, 2025

    The High-Tech Agenda of the German government

    October 20, 2025

    Texas Tech Universities Ban Teaching About Transgender and Other Gender Topics

    October 19, 2025

    Greenland Is Writhing And Twisting Into a New Shape as It Drifts Northwest : ScienceAlert

    October 30, 2025

    ‘Unprecedented’ view of the sun reveals elusive coronal waves after 85-year search

    October 30, 2025

    Certain species of bats can glow under UV light. Scientists don’t know why

    October 30, 2025

    Earth has hit its first climate tipping point, scientists warn

    October 30, 2025
  • Culture

    DHS vows to defend American culture from “Invasion,” alarming some Latinos : NPR

    October 30, 2025

    The Latrobe BulletinMailing in the culture warsThe U.S. Postal Service is a living piece of American history. Established at the Second Continental Congress in 1775, first administered by….1 hour ago

    October 30, 2025

    Best employers for company culture in TN? See who made Forbes’ list

    October 30, 2025

    Belarus Free Theatre at Icons of Culture in New York – REFORM.news (formerly REFORM.by)

    October 30, 2025

    Wabanaki cultural heritage, history a woven theme in ‘IT: Welcome to Derry’ – UMaine News

    October 30, 2025
  • Health

    What happened to Nikola Topic? Oklahoma City Thunder guard reveals health scare

    October 30, 2025

    Breast Cancer Awareness Month 2025

    October 26, 2025

    Hampton: Community Encouraged To Attend November Los Alamos County Health Council Meeting

    October 24, 2025

    Health Insurance vs. Nuclear Weapons

    October 23, 2025

    Health Care Coverage For Seniors Topic Of West Hartford Forum

    October 20, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Science»Science history: Gravitational waves detected, proving Einstein right — Sept. 14, 2015
Science

Science history: Gravitational waves detected, proving Einstein right — Sept. 14, 2015

September 14, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Quick facts

Discovery: First gravitational waves detected

Discovery date: Sept. 14, 2015 at 5:51 a.m. EDT (09:51 UTC)

Where: Livingston, Louisiana and Hanford, Washington

Who: Scientists with the LIGO Scientific Collaboration

Ten years ago today, on Sept. 14, physicists detected gravitational waves rippling through the cosmos for the first time.

The roots of this discovery date back a century. Albert Einstein’s general relativity predicted that massive objects would warp space-time. When such massive objects accelerate — such as when two black holes collide — they would send ripples through the cosmos, called gravitational waves, he posited.

Einstein never thought we could detect them, because the distortion of space-time caused by these waves would be far tinier than a single atom.


You may like

However, in the 1970s, MIT physicist Rainer Weiss, who died in August, proposed it might be possible to detect these tiny ripples from colliding massive black holes.

Key to his scheme was the interferometer, which would split a beam of laser light. From there, the light would travel down two separate paths before bouncing off hanging mirrors and recombining at their source, where a light detector would measure their arrival. Ordinarily, if the paths were the same lengths, these two beams would return at the same time.

But if a gravitational wave was passing by, Weiss reasoned, these beams would be ever-so-slightly out of phase. That’s because gravitational waves temporarily smoosh and stretch space-time, thereby creating fluctuations in the length of the passageways through which the laser beams travel.

Weiss, along with Caltech physicist Kip Thorne, proposed the idea of trying to measure these elusive waves. The detector pathways, they argued, needed to be very long to detect such tiny signals. And the project would need two widely spaced detectors to eliminate the possibility that signals came from local disturbances, and to help localize the source of cosmic collisions.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

A figure from a scientific paper showing the signals of a black hole merger

The iconic “chirp” waveform that revealed the moment gravitational waves were first detected at Hanford (left) and Livingston (right). The top three pairs of images show strain, or how much space-time was stretched and compressed, as the waves passed through. The top row shows data collected by each detector, while the middle row shows the reconstructed waveform produced when the detector data is put into theoretical models of the black holes involved. The third row shows what’s left when the reconstructed and detector data are compared. The bottom row shows the strain over time, with the frequency increasing over time. (Image credit: Abbott et al., Physical Review Letters 2016; CC BY 3.0)

By 1990, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) project had been approved, and two identical L-shaped detectors, with arms 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) long, were built in Hanford, Washington and Livingston, Louisiana, respectively.

For years, the detectors found nothing. So LIGO was upgraded to become more sensitive to ever-tinier signals. Much of that entailed protecting the equipment from vibrations caused by nearby traffic, planes or distant earthquakes, which could obscure the signals from the distant universe.

In September 2015, the scientists turned on the upgraded instruments.


You may like

Overnight on Sept. 14, researchers at both LIGO sites detected something interesting.

“I got to the computer and I looked at the screen. And lo and behold, there is this incredible picture of the waveform, and it looked like exactly the thing that had been imagined by Einstein,” Weiss said in a documentary about the discovery.

It was a strong “chirp,” or a fluctuation in the length of the detector arms, and it was a thousand times smaller than the diameter of a nucleus.

On Feb. 11, 2016, scientists announced that the event they’d detected came from the smashup of two massive black holes that collided about 1.3 billion years ago. Europe’s gravitational wave experiment, called Virgo, detected the same event.

The discovery ushered in a whole new way to study the universe’s most extreme events. Since that first detection, LIGO’s detectors, along with its European counterpart experiment Virgo and the Japanese Kamioka Gravitational Wave Detector (KAGRA), have detected around 300 collisions, including triple black hole mergers and the collision of black holes and neutron stars. In June 2023, a team of scientists announced that a faint “gravitational wave background” permeates the universe thanks to pairs of black holes veering toward collision all across space and time. And in September 2025, scientists from the LIGO Collaboration validated Stephen Hawking’s decades-old theory about black holes, linking quantum mechanics and general relativity.

Weiss and Thorne, along with their colleague Barry Barish, were awarded the 2017 Nobel Prize for their work.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Greenland Is Writhing And Twisting Into a New Shape as It Drifts Northwest : ScienceAlert

October 30, 2025

‘Unprecedented’ view of the sun reveals elusive coronal waves after 85-year search

October 30, 2025

Certain species of bats can glow under UV light. Scientists don’t know why

October 30, 2025

Earth has hit its first climate tipping point, scientists warn

October 30, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

DOJ Scrubs Jan. 6 Attack From Court Record After Suspending Career Prosecutors

October 30, 2025

DHS vows to defend American culture from “Invasion,” alarming some Latinos : NPR

October 30, 2025

2025 Illinois Report Card provides glimpse of student progress

October 30, 2025

What happened to Nikola Topic? Oklahoma City Thunder guard reveals health scare

October 30, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (5,049)
  • Business (313)
  • Career (4,285)
  • Climate (213)
  • Culture (4,251)
  • Education (4,467)
  • Finance (203)
  • Health (855)
  • Lifestyle (4,137)
  • Science (4,154)
  • Sports (314)
  • Tech (174)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (5,049)
  • Business (313)
  • Career (4,285)
  • Climate (213)
  • Culture (4,251)
  • Education (4,467)
  • Finance (203)
  • Health (855)
  • Lifestyle (4,137)
  • Science (4,154)
  • Sports (314)
  • Tech (174)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.