Andrew Chamblin Lecture 2017 - LIGO and Beyond : Exploring the Universe with Gravitational Waves

Duration: 1 hour 16 mins
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Description: Guest Speaker: Kip Thorne delivers the Eleventh Andrew Chamblin Memorial Lecture - Tuesday 23 May 2017
 
Created: 2017-06-14 16:37
Collection: Andrew Chamblin Memorial Lectures
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: Ms J E Wilders
Language: eng (English)
Distribution: World     (downloadable)
Explicit content: No
Aspect Ratio: 4:3
Screencast: No
Bumper: UCS Default
Trailer: UCS Default
 
Abstract: Gravitational waves are ripples in the fabric of space and time predicted by Albert Einstein 100 years ago. After a half century effort, we humans have had our first contact them. LIGO (the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory) has detected and deciphered gravitational waves produced by pairs of colliding black holes a billion light years from Earth. Thorne will describe LIGO, its genesis and its discoveries, and the future of gravitational-wave astronomy: a future in which astronomers will probe a rich range of phenomena, including the birth of the universe and the birth of the fundamental forces of nature in our universe’s earliest moments.
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