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How Astronomers Learned to ‘Listen’ to Gravitational Waves

Since confirming the existence of ripples in the fabric of space-time some five years ago, the LIGO/Virgo collaboration has advanced gravitational-wave research by leaps and bounds.

An artist’s illustration of two black holes coalescing. As they collide, the two black holes produce gravitational waves that ripple through the fabric of space-time.Credit: National Science Foundation

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Over 100 years ago, Albert Einstein published his general theory of relativity, laying the foundation for our modern view of gravity. Einstein proposed that massive objects can warp the fabric of space-time, with the heaviest, densest objects, such as stars and black holes, creating deep “gravity wells” in the fabric. And much like a donated penny rolls along a curved path when it’s dropped into a charity well, Einstein realized that when light passes through a gravity well, the photons' paths likewise get deformed.

But that’s far from all that Einstein’s theory predicted. It also suggested that when two very massive objects spiral toward each other before colliding, their individual gravity wells interact. And as two whirlpools rotating around each other in an ocean would send out strong ripples in the water, two inspiraling cosmic objects send out ripples across space-time — known as gravitational waves.

Despite Einstein’s prediction of ...

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