COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Scott Lectures > Gravitational-Wave Detectors Below 10Hz: LISA, Pulsar Timing Arrays, CMB Polarization, Atom Interferometers, and the Big Bang Observer
Gravitational-Wave Detectors Below 10Hz: LISA, Pulsar Timing Arrays, CMB Polarization, Atom Interferometers, and the Big Bang ObserverAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Leona Hope-Coles. This talk has been canceled/deleted Thorne will describe gravitational wave sources below about 10 Hz (massive black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs, and phenomena in the very early universe), and the various techniques that are being developed to search for them: space-based optical interferometry (LISA and the Big Bang Observer), pulsar timing arrays, CMB polarization, and atom interferometry. It is likely that pulsar timing arrays (at 10 -7 to 10-9 Hz) will detect waves from supermassive black holes within this decade. LISA (the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) will likely fly in approx 2020 and see tens of thousands of sources at frequencies around 0.1 to 10-5Hz. Atom interferometry may open up the frequency band around 0.1 to 10 Hz. CMB Polarization (at around 10-17 Hz) may bring us our first glimpse of the inflationary era when the universe was around 10-34 seconds old. The Big Bang Observer in the 2030s (at around 0.001 to 1 Hz) may bring us an in depth study of the big bang and also the kind of high-resolution observations of the contemporary universe that are now routinely achieved by optical, radio, and x-ray telescopes. This talk is part of the Scott Lectures series. This talk is included in these lists:This talk is not included in any other list Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsPhotonics Research Group - Department of Electrical Engineering Psychology and Religion Research Group (PRRG) Cambridge Lymphoma Network (CaLy)Other talksLARMOR LECTURE - Exoplanets, on the hunt of Universal life Multi-Index Stochastic Collocation (MISC) for Elliptic PDEs with random data Dynamical large deviations in glassy systems Opportunities and Challenges in Generative Adversarial Networks: Looking beyond the Hype Changing languages in European Higher Education: from official policies to unofficial classroom practices Vision Journal Club: feedforward vs back in figure ground segmentation “Modulating Tregs in Cancer and Autoimmunity” Art and Migration A feast of languages: multilingualism in neuro-typical and atypical populations Active bacterial suspensions: from individual effort to team work Ethics for the working mathematician, seminar 9 CANCELLED |