New Distributed Project Seeks Gravity Waves 234
fenimor writes "Much like the popular SETI@Home distributed computing project that searches radio telescope data for signs of extraterrestrial life, the new Einstein@Home will search for gravitational waves in data collected by U.S. and European gravitational wave detectors. Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity predicted the existence of gravitational waves in 1916, but only now has technology reached the point that scientists hope to detect them directly."
What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:5, Informative)
It would be another confirmation of Einstein's theory. Some more background here [wikipedia.org].
And here's some about a recent satellite [wikipedia.org] also hoping to establish the existence of gravity waves.
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:2)
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:2, Insightful)
And, yes, go ahead and mark me Troll
Definitive? (Score:2)
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:2)
However, I would like to point out that any theory of gravitation that requires the effect of gravity to move at a finite speed will predict gravitational waves. Only the details of the wave will provide a confirmation of Einstien's theory.
Re:This. (Score:3, Informative)
2) GR does not make any prediction such as "in the far field, gravity waves should look like the result of dipole excitations" or quadrupole. In the far field, in a linearized patch of spacetime (a small patch of it, in which special relativity can be applied) gravity waves should obey a linear wav
Re:This. (Score:2)
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:5, Informative)
If you can detect primordial gravity waves from the very early universe(harder!), you now have an indication that inflation (rapid expansion) of the universe is a reasonable cosmological model rather than its current somewhat ad hoc status. It nicely explains away some problems with simpler models, but no real direct test has been performed to show that it happened.
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:5, Interesting)
First, the direct detection of gravitational waves would confirm certain aspects of the theory of general relativity, as other posters have noted.
Second, gravitational wave detectors will provide us with a new window to the universe. Ordinary stars emit mostly visible light, so ordinary optical telescopes are well suited to their study. Cold clouds of interstellar gas emit mostly radio waves, so radio telescopes are the best choice to study them. We know of certain objects --- relatively uncommon ones -- which ought to produce a good deal of gravitational radiation: very massive objects moving very quickly, such as pairs of black holes or neutron stars orbiting around each other at small distances. Gravitational wave detectors will allow astronomers to study the properties of these objects more precisely than we can with ordinary telescopes (since they do not emit much electromagnetic radiation).
Finally, it is possible (though I suspect unlikely) that the universe may contain a whole class (or classes) of objects which are currently unknown to us, but which will appear as strong sources of gravitational radiation. Almost every time astronomers have added a new type of telescope to their toolkit, they have stumbled across previously unknown phenomena. The first gamma-ray telescopes, for example, revealed gamma-ray bursts, which were completely undetected (and unexpected) by other means in the late sixties and early seventies.
One last note: LIGO and other gravitational wave detectors provide very poor angular resolution, compared to ordinary optical telescopes. They will tell us something like "a source of gravitational waves is over there, about 10 degrees above the horizon at 5 degrees south of East." The "error circle" for a typical detection will be a few degrees in size. It may be quite a challenge for astronomers to identify the optical counterpart to a new source of gravitational waves, since there will usually be thousands to millions of optical sources within the error box of a gravitational wave detection.
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:3, Insightful)
The stochastic gravity wave background, which is a prediction of inflation, is predicted to be at power levels which are curren
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:2)
Mostly true. Gamma ray bursts were first discovered by DoD satellites that monitored the Gamma spectrum in an attempt to ferret out clandestine nuclear tests and/or the usage of nuclear weapons (in combat). The first Gamma-ray telescopes were launched partly in connection with that discovery. (Though the DoD contribution was not
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:3, Informative)
An excellent, popular book about the topic is Black Holes and Time Wraps by Kip
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What do gravity waves tell us? (Score:2)
One of the most load sources of gravitational waves are collapses of binary neutron stars or black holes.
If a waveform of such a collapse is found it should first obey Einstein's equations and then quickly transition into the regime of quantum gravity which we know nothing about.
Such information would be extremely valuable as (at the moment) there is no way we can experiment with quantum gravity in a laboratory - the energies involved are far beyound what current accelerators
Bah humbug. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Bah humbug. (Score:2)
Re:Bah humbug. (Score:2)
But that is what EM waves are: oscillatory field lines. Take two point charges separated a certain distance; they feel a force between them. Now wiggle one charge up and down thus putting wiggles into the field lines. The other charge feels these changes and starts to wiggle up and down too. Increase the wiggle rate to a megacycle or so and you can talk to each other via radio. See
Wave in GR and E&M (Score:2)
Electric charges and their motion are the sources of electric and magnetic fields. However, you can also have electromagnetic waves (radio waves, light, gamma rays, etc.), which are self-purpetuating in the absense of charges. These wave are produced when an electric charge accelerates and keep going far away from the charge that produced them.
Mass and energy* are the sources of gravitational fields, and, in fact, Newton's law (which is an approximate description of gravity in certain situations) looks
Relevant link (Score:5, Informative)
Posting as AC to avoid karma whoring.
Useful information is karma whoring? (Score:2)
Next time just post the link, a short description of what it is about, and glory in being able to provide useful info.
Re:Useful information is karma whoring? - OT (Score:3, Informative)
Stuff like how Einstein@ home is running on BOINC, which also runs SETI@home
http://boinc.berkeley.edu/
so it should be pretty stable. Anyone who read the articles or attempted to sign up would know that, but most of the mods didn't do either.
They were playing the Karma game, back when karma was permanently accrued and displayed. People got their Karma numbers up into the tens
Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:3, Insightful)
There's a lot of moderators out there that don't understand just what a Troll is. They think that if they don't agree with somebody's opinions, that makes the poster a Troll, no matter how polite and well-reasoned teh post is. Either that, or they think it's a good way to punish somebody they don't like. All I know is, at least half the Troll mods I get to meta-mod are unfair, and that's how I mark them.
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2)
he also made the claims that gravity waves are instantaneous (i.e., have no discernable speed), and that such waves are generated by the decay of element 115.
maybe it doesn't take insane amounts of energy to do. maybe there are things physics theories simply can't describe just yet.
i, for one, am keeping an open mind.
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2)
Re:Anti-Gravity Engine? (Score:2)
Very nice old game. The UFOs indeed were propelled by gravity waves, using an element called "Elerium 115"
Not to push this down... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Re:A short list... (Score:2)
Most of these things were pretty esoteric at one time or another.
The grandparent's point is that Einstein's theory is already accepted and it isn't "esoteric" as you. The grandparent's point of view is that this is going to tell us nothing that we don't already know... kind of like yet another proof of Pythagoras' theorem.
Not say that I agree, just that I think you missed the point.
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
If fact it'd probably be foolish we just insisted on all reasearch of type x be about problem y. Shure we'd solve say herpes much faster, but in the meantime we get invaded by zergonians pissed off because we never answered thier galactic email.
Mycroft
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Well, if we achieve the first, then the second is simply a matter of enough time...
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Re:Not to push this down... (Score:2)
Kind of worries me. (Score:3, Funny)
observed first in 70s experiment? (Score:2, Interesting)
Unfortunately the experiment was not confirmed in a latter one, and it is believed, that something else was observed in this moment.
Did someone knows something else about this first experiment?
Re:observed first in 70s experiment? (Score:3, Interesting)
The "something else" that was observed was most likely to be big ordinary vibrations which the experiments were trying to subtract to leave a small signal.
LIGO project (Score:4, Informative)
Re:LIGO project (Score:3, Informative)
The coolest thing about this project is: (Score:3, Informative)
The BOINC [berkeley.edu] versions of Seti@Home and Climateprediction are similar.
You can attach to all of them and have the client devide your CPU time any way you want.
BOINC also has a folding client (predictor@home), but there's no eye candy.
Is this really useful? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is this really useful? (Score:2)
Apparantly all those people participating in seti@home don't lend much credence to your ratings, but have made their own choices of where to spend their resources, on goals they do find relevant.
Tune Your Gravio (Gravity Radio) to 93.1GHz (Score:2, Interesting)
They Claim To "Own" The Data (Score:5, Insightful)
They also make no mention of license terms or client source availability.
Re:They Claim To "Own" The Data (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:They Claim To "Own" The Data (Score:2)
I'm really considering donating this time, because I *DON'T* see that there is a large financial benefit to owning the data. If I did, then I'd want significant comitment that they wouldn't restrict the right
Re:They Claim To "Own" The Data (Score:2)
My logic is this:
If you're doing something for the general benefit of mankind with the results being free for all to use/extend, then I'll follow your lead and let you use some spare cycles on my PC (which do cost me money since my PC would otherwise throttle the CPU/fan/etc).
If on the other hand you plan on selling your results to the highest bidder then this is a commercial enterprise and you had better be prepared to make
Re:They Claim To "Own" The Data (Score:2)
> is so that if your machine is the one that
> analyzes the parcel of data that reveals Gravity
> Waves, you can't take credit away from the
> Project by claiming that you discovered it.
Nonsense. Even if a single parcel was able to "reveal gravity waves" they would be the first to know. The results must be sent back to them for comparison with other results before anything can be "revealed".
> Also, that would probably make it illegal to
>
Re:They Claim To "Own" The Data (Score:2)
Re:They Claim To "Own" The Data (Score:2)
Definitely not, Data has shown time and again that his 'quest' for humanity as much as makes him human. Data wants to be free
Here here (Score:2)
Glad someone else noticed this bit:
"Use of LIGO and GEO data - Data supplied for analysis with Einstein@Home are not to be used for any other purpose without the consent of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration (LSC)."
I love it when projects paid for with public money think they can control how their stuff is used.
in search for smaller things (Score:2, Interesting)
why do we care (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:why do we care (Score:2)
I agree. Humans are not the center of the universe, and there are more important matters in the universe than humankind. Therefore I think there are more important distributed projects than Folding@Home. And that's just my humble absolutely true opinion ;)
We have a team. (Score:2, Interesting)
http://einstein.phys.uwm.edu/team_display.php?tea
If you run einstein@home, get yer arse on it.
Wild speculation to follow: (Score:2)
"Even though it's a dupe, this is the first time I saw this story. Now I know I'm thinking of correlations in the wild, but 10,000 trillion trillion trillion watts is a large amount of energy.
Two days earlier, there was a massive earthquake. I wo
Gravity waves != Gravitational waves (Score:3, Interesting)
Gravity waves are waves where displacement from equilibrium in a medium is counteracted by the force of gravity. For example, the waves on the surface of a pond are due to regions that are higher getting pulled down by gravity.
Gravitational waves are a phenomenon in general relativity where accelerating dense masses cause waves in the space-time metric that propogate at the speed of light.
[TMB]
Re:Gravity waves != Gravitational waves (Score:2)
And yes, I know it's annoying that two very different things have similar names.
[TMB]
project MiniGrail (Score:3, Informative)
mime type miss-match for the linux binary? (Score:2)
I've not had any problems of a
This gravity wave search rather intrigues me, but if I cannot dl the boinc manager, what good is it to do a linux version if the webmaster putting it up for dl hasn't the foggiest what a
--
Cheers, Gene
"Grassroots project" my ass (Score:3, Interesting)
Thanks for giving me this opportunity to vent.
Slashdot, please make your text entry box a little wider.
Oh Damn (Score:2)
Mac OS X client not ready for prime time (Score:3, Informative)
I'm supposed to trust these amateurs with my Mac? If they don't have the needed programming knowledge they need to get it and do so before inflicting unnecessary havoc on unsuspecting voluteers. Take a look at Folding@Home or SETI to get an idea of what you need to have done before you ask the public to trust your work.
Re:Mac OS X client not ready for prime time (Score:2)
Re:ARGH (Score:3, Informative)
Re:ARGH (Score:2)
Re:USB? (Score:2)
No need for that, just invite CowboyNeal and show him the USB device.
Re:Serious question. (Score:2)
Also, read yesterday's story "Science: Huge Star Quake Rocks Milky Way" http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/02/ 1 9/013255&tid=160 [slashdot.org] - I imagine that even
Re:Serious question. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Serious question. (Score:2)
Detecting gravitational waves is one of the easiest ways to detect cloked startships. "Einstein @ home" is a clever cover for "the US Department of Homeland Security: Romulan Invasion Alert System"
Re:So? (Score:2)
Re:Cool, but... (Score:2)
There are probably some simple reasons for that. Stars and black holes are simpler and easier to learn about than protiens.
I do agree that biological research is important, OTOH I don't feel badly that more people don't choose to donate their extra CPU cycles to such research. I paid for my compute
Re:Cool, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
It wouldn't bother me if what they ended up with was publication priority, but they stand to end up with patents that mean they can deny benefits to the very people who helped them. I find this undesireable.
OTOH, Einsein@home and Seti@Home don't appear to have the commercial mo
Re:Cool, but... (Score:2)
Unlike other distributed computing projects, Folding@home is run by an academic institution (specifically the Pande Group, at Stanford University's Chemistry Department), which is a nonprofit institution dedicated to science research and education. We will not sell the data or make any money off of it.
But the license terms allow that, so they had to make that as a separate promise. (And this wasn't on the web site when I investigated pa
SETI@Home vs. other distributed computing tasks (Score:2)
Gimps (http://www.mersenne.org/prime.htm [mersenne.org], large prime number search) is also a popular distributed computing task, and I think there are a few other 'minor players' in the game of soliciting free CPU cycles from the public. Does anyone know offhand how many computers are running each task?
Re:First line of quote (Score:2)
TBE, as of right now, 5,357,872 total users according to the stats page I'm looking at with another browser right now...
Your 'tens of thousands' is a wee bit of an understatement.
--
Cheers, Gene
Don't know -- climateprediction.net (Score:2)
Re:No more interest? (Score:2)
Re:SETI@Home (Score:3, Funny)
Re:SETI@Home (Score:2)
The probability of finding life on a random planet in this universe is greater than zero. Think about it for a moment.
Reading your comment, though, I'm not sure about intelligent life.
Re:SETI@Home (Score:2)
Re:Its a big question... (Score:5, Insightful)
I have been doing seti for nearly since it started, currently standing at 99.339% in overall rankings.
I do this mainly because my sci-fi reading goes all the way back to E.E. (Doc) Smith, which some of you might consider as the McGuffies Readers of the day and which is circa 60+ years back up the log now. One always hopes that his machine might be the one to raise its hand and holler, Hey Teach, I hear something.
But realisticly, after 5+ years, and the results of nearly 6 million people, coupled with the limited sky view of Aricebo, does tend to tell you after a while that the chances are someplace between point double ought zip and absolutely nothing. The data, I think, has been analysed several times by now, with no really outstanding candidate signals haveing been detected. Going over that same limited band of the sky, at the same limited band of frequencies, is beginning to grow old.
This gravity wave project is intrigueing, but I don't seem to be able to dl the BOINC client, mime type error I think at the BOINC site.
As far as the parent posters suggestion that we should be working on the cancer project, sorry but I'm enough of an open source advocate that my cycles will not be used for such a project wherein the output data is owned by some commercial entity, who if they get lucky will profit immensely from any discoveries so made. Likewise for the folding@home project. If the results are not to be public knowledge, able to benefit all manner of life, then screw 'em just like they'll screw me at the prescription counter for the product that may result.
There is, I would hope, a new way of doing such research that will meet these ideas, doing it openly, with the results being unencumbered by patents, and the products so developed then sold on the open market (but regulated by the FDA of course) by the time honored tradition of he who can do it the best, or cheapest, being the marketplace winner, with open competition between the makers for our dollars. The FDA's job then is like the agriculture dept folks, to make sure the process is being done by the proper methods, that being by way of testing the efficiency, and safety of the product at doing what it is being sold for.
But to bring that about, you are all I trust, aware that we will have to declare a Bill Shakespear day as an annual holiday.
The chances of that actually happening are also somewhere between point double ought zip and nothing in our present society.
Then, and only then, would I personally be interested in doing what amounts to free data processing for a commercially profitable entity.
Now, if they want to buy my cpu time at a rate that helps me pay the energy bill to run these machines, and a piece of the action (no RIAA bookkeeping to be allowed here folks, its a piece of the gross sales only, the internal expenses for that Lamborgini and the sexytary who wants a quarter of a mill just to have your baby are yours to control) then I might consider learning a different tune.
But I sure wouldn't sleep any better.
Now, if they would fix the mime type on the linux binary of BOINC, I'd dl it and take a look.
Cheers, Gene
Folding@home nonprofit according to the FAQ (Score:3, Informative)
http://folding.stanford.edu/faq.html#project.own [stanford.edu]
Re:Folding@home nonprofit according to the FAQ (Score:2)
Normally, I had it setup to dial up and check the email at 1 hour intervals, but folding brought that machine to its knees begging for enough cycles to get the mail before the m