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FEATURE ARTICLE

The Sounds of Spacetime

In the biggest events in the universe, massive black holes collide with a chirp and a ring. Physicists are finding ways to listen in

Craig Hogan

Vibrations of Spacetime

The sounds of the cosmos are not the familiar sounds our ears sense, carried by vibrations in air. Space is a near-perfect vacuum, and ordinary sound carries only where there is matter to vibrate. That's one reason why our immediate knowledge of the universe far away from the solar system, from prescientific astronomy up to now, comes almost entirely from studying one form of energy: light. As James Clerk Maxwell showed in the 19th century, light is another name for vibrations in electrical and magnetic fields that travel through space—at the speed of light.

(To be fair, we should not forget here other messengers from afar—cosmic rays, neutrinos, cosmic dust, meteorites and other matter falling to Earth from outer space—and most of all, we should not forget the cosmic origin of all the atoms which make up Earth and ourselves! But those are other stories.)

In contrast to the swift-traveling vibrations in electrical and magnetic fields that we call light, the sounds of the universe are carried by vibrations in spacetime called gravitational waves. Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity tells us that all forms of matter create warps in spacetime and that motions of matter create vibrations that travel throughout space at the speed of light. The vibrations stretch the fabric of space itself back and forth in a way that can be detected far away. The fastest accelerations of the densest objects, with the strongest gravity, presumed to be black holes (which are themselves nothing but dense knots of spacetime curvature), create the loudest vibrations. When we can hear them, those vibrations will let us listen to huge and often invisible cataclysms throughout the observable universe.

Gravitational waves are emitted when big masses accelerate; light is emitted when tiny electrical charges accelerate. That means that gravitational waves have much lower frequencies than light, and come from totally different kinds of happenings in the universe. For example, normal stars sitting on their own emit lots of light, from jiggling electrons in their hot atmospheres, but almost no gravitational radiation. At the opposite extreme, the most powerful energy transformations in the universe, where two black holes merge with each other and form a larger black hole, emit almost all of their energy as gravitational waves and almost none of it as light. Indeed, for the brief time of the merger, up to an hour or so for the largest holes we know about, just one such merging pair emits a thousand times more power in gravitational waves than all the stars in all the galaxies in the visible universe, everything combined, emit as light. So the loudest things in the universe are not the brightest things, and vice versa; the two kinds of energy really are like entirely different senses of what is happening out there.

Figure 2. Snapshot from a simulation where a series of circular rings are deformed by a passing gravitational waveClick to Enlarge Image

As Peter S. Shawhan explained in these pages ("Gravitational Waves and the Effort to Detect Them," July-August 2004), Einstein's theory allows us to calculate many properties of gravitational waves. It tells us that gravitational waves pass through anything; they traverse the farthest reaches of spacetime, the earliest moments of the Big Bang, to reach us. The theory tells us that ordinary pairs of stars orbiting each other, including binaries we know about already, should be emitting gravitational waves, and exactly how much energy they emit. It tells us the exact mathematical shape of the warped spacetime in black holes, which is encoded in precisely predictable gravitational waves emitted by any object falling in.

In short, we have a definite mathematical model for the ways space and time around us should vibrate. By eavesdropping on gravitational waves, we can explore the whole universe in an entirely new way, and at the same time test our fundamental ideas about how space and time behave.

There is precise indirect evidence that gravitational waves exist. Russell Hulse and Joseph Taylor were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1993 in part for measuring the effects of gravitational-wave energy loss on a binary pulsar system. But up to now, nobody has detected a gravitational wave directly. As I write this, the first major detector is a few months into its first sustained period of listening.





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