Gabriela Gonzlez How LIGO discovered gravitational waves with English subtitles TED

A little over 100 years ago, in 1915,

Einstein published
his theory of general relativity,

which is sort of a strange name,

but it’s a theory that explains gravity.

It states that mass – all matter,
the planets – attracts mass,

not because of an instantaneous force,
as Newton claimed,

but because all matter –
all of us, all the planets –

wrinkles the flexible fabric
of space-time.

Space-time is this thing in which we live
and that connects us all.

It’s like when we lie down on a mattress
and distort its contour.

The masses move – again,
not according to Newton’s laws,

but because they see
this space-time curvature

and follow the little curves,

just like when our bedmate
nestles up to us

because of the mattress curvature.

(Laughter)

A year later, in 1916,

Einstein derived from his theory

that gravitational waves existed,

and that these waves were produced
when masses move,

like, for example, when two stars
revolve around one another

and create folds in space-time
which carry energy from the system,

and the stars move toward each other.

However, he also estimated

that these effects were so minute,

that it would never be possible
to measure them.

I’m going to tell you the story of how,

with the work of hundreds of scientists
working in many countries

over the course of many decades,

just recently, in 2015,

we discovered those gravitational
waves for the first time.

It’s a rather long story.

It started 1.3 billion years ago.

A long, long time ago,

in a galaxy far, far away –

(Laughter)

two black holes were revolving
around one another –

“dancing the tango,” I like to say.

It started slowly,

but as they emitted gravitational waves,

they grew closer together,
accelerating in speed,

until, when they were revolving
at almost the speed of light,

they fused into a single black hole

that had 60 times the mass of the Sun,

but compressed
into the space of 360 kilometers.

That’s the size of the state of Louisiana,

where I live.

This incredible effect
produced gravitational waves

that carried the news of this cosmic hug
to the rest of the universe.

It took us a long time to figure out
the effects of these gravitational waves,

because the way we measure them
is by looking for effects in distances.

We want to measure longitudes, distances.

When these gravitational waves
passed by Earth,

which was in 2015,

they produced changes in all distances –

the distances between all of you,
the distances between you and me,

our heights –

every one of us
stretched and shrank a tiny bit.

The prediction is that the effect
is proportional to the distance.

But it’s very small:

even for distances much greater
than my slight height,

the effect is infinitesimal.

For example, the distance
between the Earth and the Sun

changed by one atomic diameter.

How can that be measured?

How could we measure it?

Fifty years ago,

some visionary physicists
at Caltech and MIT –

Kip Thorne, Ron Drever, Rai Weiss –

thought they could precisely
measure distances

using lasers that measured
distances between mirrors

kilometers apart.

It took many years, a lot of work
and many scientists

to develop the technology
and develop the ideas.

And 20 years later,

almost 30 years ago,

they started to build two gravitational
wave detectors, two interferometers,

in the United States.

Each one is four kilometers long;

one is in Livingston, Louisiana,

in the middle of a beautiful forest,

and the other is in Hanford, Washington,

in the middle of the desert.

The interferometers have lasers

that travel from the center
through four kilometers in-vacuum,

are reflected in mirrors
and then they return.

We measure the difference in the distances

between this arm and this arm.

These detectors are very,
very, very sensitive;

they’re the most precise
instruments in the world.

Why did we make two?

It’s because the signals
that we want to measure come from space,

but the mirrors are moving all the time,

so in order to distinguish
the gravitational wave effects –

which are astrophysical effects
and should show up on the two detectors –

we can distinguish them
from the local effects,

which appear separately,
either on one or the other.

In September of 2015,

we were finishing installing
the second-generation technology

in the detectors,

and we still weren’t at the optimal
sensitivity that we wanted –

we’re still not, even now,
two years later –

but we wanted to gather data.

We didn’t think we’d see anything,

but we were getting ready to start
collecting a few months' worth of data.

And then nature surprised us.

On September 14, 2015,

we saw, in both detectors,

a gravitational wave.

In both detectors, we saw a signal

with cycles that increased
in amplitude and frequency

and then go back down.

And they were the same in both detectors.

They were gravitational waves.

And not only that –
in decoding this type of wave,

we were able to deduce
that they came from black holes

fusing together to make one,

more than a billion years ago.

And that was –

(Applause)

that was fantastic.

At first, we couldn’t believe it.

We didn’t imagine
this would happen until much later;

it was a surprise for all of us.

It took us months to convince
ourselves that it was true,

because we didn’t want to leave
any room for error.

But it was true, and to clear up any doubt

that the detectors
really could measure these things,

in December of that same year,

we measured another gravitational wave,

smaller than the first one.

The first gravitational wave
produced a difference in the distance

of four-thousandths of a proton

over four kilometers.

Yes, the second detection was smaller,

but still very convincing
by our standards.

Despite the fact that these are space-time
waves and not sound waves,

we like to put them into loudspeakers
and listen to them.

We call this “the music of the universe.”

I’d like you to listen
to the first two notes of that music.

(Chirping sound)

(Chirping sound)

The second, shorter sound
was the last fraction of a second

of the two black holes which,

in that fraction of a second,
emitted vast amounts of energy –

so much energy, it was like three Suns
converting into energy,

following that famous formula,

E = mc2.

Remember that one?

We love this music so much
we actually dance to it.

I’m going to have you listen again.

(Chirping sound)

(Chirping sound)

It’s the music of the universe!

(Applause)

People frequently ask me now:

“What can gravitational waves
be used for?

And now that you’ve discovered them,
what else is there left to do?”

What can gravitational waves
be used for?

When they asked Borges,
“What is the purpose of poetry?”

he, in turn, answered,

“What’s the purpose of dawn?

What’s the purpose of caresses?

What’s the purpose
of the smell of coffee?”

He answered,

“The purpose of poetry is pleasure;
it’s for emotion, it’s for living.”

And understanding the universe,

this human curiosity for knowing
how everything works,

is similar.

Since time immemorial, humanity –
all of us, everyone, as kids –

when we look up at the sky
for the first time and see the stars,

we wonder,

“What are stars?”

That curiosity is what makes us human.

And that’s what we do with science.

We like to say that gravitational waves
now have a purpose,

because we’re opening up
a new way to explore the universe.

Until now, we were able to see
the light of the stars

via electromagnetic waves.

Now we can listen
to the sound of the universe,

even of things that don’t emit light,
like gravitational waves.

(Applause)

Thank you.

(Applause)

But are they useful?

Can’t we derive any technology
from gravitational waves?

Yes, probably.

But it will probably take a lot of time.

We’ve developed
the technology to detect them,

but in terms of the waves themselves,

maybe we’ll discover 100 years from now
that they are useful.

But it takes a lot of time
to derive technology from science,

and that’s not why we do it.

All technology is derived from science,

but we practice science for the enjoyment.

What’s left to do?

A lot.

A lot; this is only the beginning.

As we make the detectors
more and more sensitive –

and we have lots of work to do there –

not only are we going to see
more black holes

and be able to catalog
how many there are, where they are

and how big they are,

we’ll also be able to see other objects.

We’ll see neutron stars fuse
and turn into black holes.

We’ll see a black holes being born.

We’ll be able to see
rotating stars in our galaxy

produce sinusoidal waves.

We’ll be able to see
explosions of supernovas in our galaxy.

We’ll be seeing
a whole spectrum of new sources.

We like to say

that we’ve added a new sense
to the human body:

now, in addition to seeing,

we’re able to hear.

This is a revolution in astronomy,

like when Galileo invented the telescope.

It’s like when they added sound
to silent movies.

This is just the beginning.

We like to think

that the road to science is very long –
very fun, but very long –

and that we, this large,
international community of scientists,

working from many countries,
together as a team,

are helping to build that road;

that we’re shedding light –
sometimes encountering detours –

and building, perhaps,

a highway to the universe.

Thank you.

(Applause)

100 多年前的 1915 年,

爱因斯坦发表
了他的广义相对论,

这个名字有点奇怪,

但它是一个解释引力的理论。

它指出,质量——所有物质
,行星——吸引质量,

不是因为牛顿声称的瞬时力,

而是因为所有物质——
我们所有人,所有行星——

使时空的柔性结构起皱
.

时空是我们生活的东西
,它连接着我们所有人。

这就像当我们躺在床垫上
并扭曲它的轮廓时一样。

群众移动——同样,
不是根据牛顿定律,

而是因为他们看到了
这个时空曲率

并遵循这些小曲线,

就像我们的床

因为床垫的曲率而依偎在我们身边一样。

(笑声)

一年后,即 1916 年,

爱因斯坦从他的理论推导

出引力波存在

,这些引力波是
在质量运动时产生

的,例如,当两颗恒星
围绕彼此旋转

并在时空中产生褶皱时
携带来自系统的能量

,恒星相互移动。

然而,他也

估计这些影响是如此微小,

以至于永远
无法测量它们。

我将告诉你一个故事,

在过去的几十年里,数百名
科学家在许多国家工作

就在最近的 2015 年,

我们第一次发现了这些引力
波。

这是一个相当长的故事。

它始于 13 亿年前。

很久很久以前,

在一个很远很远的星系里——

(笑声)

两个黑洞
互相围绕着——

“跳探戈舞,”我喜欢说。

它开始缓慢,

但随着它们发射引力波,

它们变得越来越靠近,
速度加快

,直到它们
以几乎光速旋转时,

它们融合成一个

质量为太阳质量 60 倍的黑洞,

而是压缩
到了360公里的空间内。

这就是我居住的路易斯安那州的面积

这种令人难以置信的效果
产生了引力波

,将这个宇宙拥抱的消息
带到了宇宙的其他地方。

我们花了很长时间才弄清楚
这些引力波的影响,

因为我们测量它们的方法
是寻找距离上的影响。

我们想测量经度、距离。

当这些引力波在 2015 年
经过地球时,

它们产生了所有距离的变化——

你们所有人
之间的距离,你我之间的距离,

我们的身高——我们

每个人都在
拉伸和收缩。

预测是效果
与距离成正比。

但它非常小:

即使距离
远大于我的身高

,效果也是微乎其微的。

例如,
地球和太阳之间的距离

改变了一个原子直径。

那怎么能衡量呢?

我们如何测量它?

五十年前,

加州理工学院和麻省理工学院的一些有远见的物理学家

——Kip Thorne、Ron Drever、Rai Weiss——

认为他们可以使用激光来精确
测量距离,

这些激光测量

相隔几公里的镜子之间的距离。

开发技术和发展想法需要很多年、大量工作
和许多科学家

20 年后,

差不多 30 年前,

他们开始在美国建造两个引力
波探测器,两个干涉仪

每一个都有四公里长;

一个在路易斯安那州的利文斯顿,

在一片美丽的森林中间

,另一个在华盛顿的汉福德,

在沙漠的中间。

干涉仪的

激光从中心
穿过四公里的真空,

在镜子中反射
,然后返回。

我们测量

这个手臂和这个手臂之间的距离差异。

这些探测器非常、
非常、非常灵敏。

它们是世界上最精确的
仪器。

为什么我们做了两个?

这是
因为我们要测量的信号来自太空,

但镜子一直在移动,

所以为了
区分引力波效应——

这是天体物理效应
,应该出现在两个探测器上——

我们可以区分 它们
来自局部效应,

它们分别出现
在一个或另一个上。

2015 年 9 月,

我们在探测器中完成
了第二代技术的安装

,但我们仍然没有达到
我们想要的最佳灵敏度——

即使是两年后的现在,我们仍然没有
——

但我们想要 收集数据。

我们不认为我们会看到任何东西,

但我们正准备开始
收集几个月的数据。

然后大自然让我们大吃一惊。

2015 年 9 月 14 日

,我们在两个探测器中都看到

了引力波。

在两个检测器中,我们都看到了一个信号

,其周期
在幅度和频率上增加

,然后又下降。

在两个探测器中它们是相同的。

它们是引力波。

不仅如此——
在解码这种类型的波时,

我们能够推断
出它们来自黑洞,它们在

十亿多年前融合在一起形成了一个

那就是——

(掌声)

太棒了。

起初,我们不敢相信。

直到很久以后,我们才想到会发生这种情况。

这对我们所有人来说都是一个惊喜。

我们花了几个月的时间才说服
自己这是真的,

因为我们不想留下
任何错误的余地。

但这是真的,为了消除

对探测器
真的可以测量这些东西

的怀疑,同年 12 月,

我们测量了另一个引力波,

比第一个小。

第一次引力波在四公里内
产生了千分之四质子的距离差异

是的,第二次检测较小,

但按照
我们的标准仍然非常有说服力。

尽管这些是时空
波而不是声波,

我们还是喜欢将它们放入扬声器
并聆听它们。

我们称之为“宇宙的音乐”。

我想让你
听听那首音乐的前两个音符。

(啁啾声)(啾啾声)

第二个较短的声音

是两个黑洞中的最后一秒,

在那一秒内,
释放出大量的能量——

如此之多的能量,就像三个太阳
转换成能量,

遵循那个著名的公式,

E = mc2。

还记得那个吗?

我们非常喜欢这种音乐,
我们实际上是跟着它跳舞。

我要让你再听一遍。

(啁啾声)(啾啾声)

这是宇宙的音乐!

(掌声

)现在经常有人问我:

“引力波能用来做什么

?既然你发现了,
那还有什么可做的呢?”

引力波
可以用来做什么?

当他们问博尔赫斯,
“诗歌的目的是什么?”

反过来,他回答说:

“黎明

的目的是什么?爱抚的目的是

什么
?咖啡味的目的是什么?”

他回答说:

“诗歌的目的是为了快乐,
它是为了情感,它是为了生活。”

理解宇宙

,人类对
了解万物如何运作的好奇心,

是相似的。

自古以来,人类——
我们所有人,每个人,小时候——

当我们
第一次仰望天空并看到星星时,

我们会想,

“星星是什么?”

正是这种好奇心使我们成为人类。

这就是我们对科学所做的。

我们喜欢说引力波
现在有了目的,

因为我们正在开辟
探索宇宙的新途径。

到目前为止,我们能够通过电磁波看到
星星的光

现在我们可以
听到宇宙的声音,

甚至是不发光的东西,
比如引力波。

(掌声)

谢谢。

(鼓掌)

但是有用吗?

我们不能
从引力波中获得任何技术吗?

应该是。

但这可能需要很多时间。

我们已经开发
了检测它们的技术,

但就波本身而言,

也许我们会在 100 年后
发现它们是有用的。

但是
从科学中获得技术需要很多时间

,这不是我们这样做的原因。

所有的技术都源于科学,

但我们实践科学是为了享受。

还剩下什么?

很多。

很多; 这仅仅是个开始。

随着我们让探测器
变得越来越敏感

——我们还有很多工作要做——

我们不仅会看到
更多的黑洞,

而且能够记录
有多少黑洞、它们在哪里

以及它们有多大 ,

我们也将能够看到其他对象。

我们将看到中子星融合
并变成黑洞。

我们将看到一个黑洞的诞生。

我们将能够看到
银河系中的旋转恒星

产生正弦波。

我们将能够看到
银河系中的超新星爆炸。

我们将看到
一系列新的资源。

我们喜欢

说我们为人体增加了一种新的感觉

现在,除了看到之外,

我们还能够听到。

这是天文学的一场革命,

就像伽利略发明望远镜时一样。

就像他们
在无声电影中添加声音一样。

这仅仅是个开始。

我们喜欢

认为通向科学的道路很长——
非常有趣,但也很长

——我们这个庞大的
国际科学家社区

,来自许多国家,
作为一个团队一起工作,

正在帮助建设这条道路 ;

我们正在散发光芒——
有时会遇到弯路——

并建造

一条通往宇宙的高速公路。

谢谢你。

(掌声)