Friday, July 15, 2016

First results from Sardinia Radio Telescope

Are you going to visit Sardinia this summer?
If you arrive at the Airport of Cagliari from NE, probably you will see a strange 64-meter diameter white instrument
in the middle of (almost) nothing.


What it is that?  Keep calm: aliens are not arrived yet. Your holidays are probably save. 
This is the Sardinia Radio Telescope,
a major radio astronomical facility almost ready for outstanding scientific observations. 
Its science goals spread from Radio Astronomy, Geodynamical studies and Space science.

You do not trust me?
Here the  first scientific result from observations  with this extraordinary facility, published on
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society:

https://arxiv.org/abs/1607.03636 

They observed a supermassive black hole 
moving at high velocity to a nearby galaxy cluster  3C129.
Here also a brief description of the obtained results from Matteo Murgia (in italian). 

Waiting for other exciting news from the SRT team! 


Thursday, June 16, 2016

Second detection of gravitational waves from a binary coalescence

Breaking news are all around the globe after yesterday's press conference by the LIGO/Virgo collaboration, which announced a second very solid gravitational-wave event on Boxing Day, Dec 26 2015, dubbed GW151226.

The waveforms of the 3 events detected by LIGO during O1 (the first observation run). GW150914 and GW151226 are events which are very solidly detected (at more than 5 sigma), whereas LVT151012 has a (small) probability of being a statistical fluctuation. From this page. The inspiral phase of the new event GW151226 lasted much longer than the original GW150914 (about 80 cycles in total)

I warmly suggest you to check this beautiful multimedia page, made by Marc Favata and his group.

As the LIGO/Virgo collaboration put it, the era of gravitational-wave astrophysics is officially started!


Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Angela Merkel visits ESA

More pics here
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has visited the European Space Agency (ESA) today, in order to promote Germany's participation in ESA's projects.

Friday, May 6, 2016

One cannot get rich with fundamental physics, they said...

..unless you make a landmark discovery such as the first detection of gravitational waves. In such case, you might win a $3 million Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics!

The three funding fathers of LIGO, Ronald P. Drever and Kip. S. Thorne and Rainer Weiss, are going to share $1 million, and the other other $2 million will be split among 1,012 scientists who authored the milestone article in Physical Review Letters and a list of key contributors to the theoretical and experimental understanding of gravitational waves (Luc Blanchet, Thibault Damour, Lawrence Kidder, Frans Pretorius,
Mark Scheel, Saul A. Teukolsky, Rochus E. Vogt) without which LIGO outstanding discovery would not have been possible.

As Richard Feynman brilliantly put it:




This also applies to the economical reward that might following great discoveries, and it is probably the reason why reckless and economically inconvenient science is pursed: because it is passion driven rather than money driven.

Kudos to the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration!



Sunday, May 1, 2016

College is not a commodity. Stop treating it like one.

"Unlike a car, college requires the “buyer” to do most of the work to obtain its value. The value of a degree depends more on the student’s input than on the college’s curriculum."

Just came across this excellent article by Hunter Rawlings on the Washington Post, Can't agree more.


Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Can one hear the shape of a black hole? [*]

[Edit: see also the Synopsis in APS Magazine "Physics", the coverage and this interview (in Italian) by the Italian Institute for Astrophysics (INAF), and the stories in Physics World, NewScientistPhys.org, Le Monde and Repubblica.]


An orchestra conductor can easily tell a gong from a bell just by their different sound. Can astronomers do the same and tell a black hole from another dark object just by detecting their different gravitational-wave signal? In our recent paper, Vitor Cardoso, Edgardo Franzin and I show that this might not be the case [preprint here].


Last February, the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration announced the first direct detection of gravitational waves by the two laser interferometers advanced LIGO. This historical discovery has been also welcomed as the first conclusive proof for the existence of black holes, the most extreme objects in the Universe. The detected signal --dubbed GW150914-- corresponds to the "pas de deux" of two massive objects, which inspiral around each other and eventually collide in a cosmic spacetime-quake. LIGO data firmly show that the two objects are extremely compact and way too massive to be neutron stars. While providing compelling evidence, this does not represent a bullet-proof confirmation of the existence of black holes by itself. After all, signatures of compact, dark and massive objects come routinely from electromagnetic observations with infrared and X-ray detectors.

What makes GW150914 really unique is that the gravitational-wave signal contains all the final stages of the cosmic evolution of the binary system: the two objects lose an enormous amount of energy through the emission of gravitational waves, approach each other and eventually merge to form a single compact object of about 62 solar masses. After the merger (which lasted only a few milliseconds!) the final object was highly distorted and underwent an adjustment phase known as the "ringdown", in which the object vibrates pretty much like a drum. Just like the notes of the drum depend on its properties (the shape, the size, the material), the "ringdown modes" should carry information about the very nature of the final object produced after the merger.

A comparison between the ringdown signal of a particle falling into a black hole (black dashed line) and the same particle falling into a wormhole (red line). The wormhole geometry is illustrated in the top right corner. The two signals are identical at early times and the "universal" ringdown waveform is associated to the particle reaching point "A" (the light ring). The real quasinormal modes of the wormhole appear only at late times, when the particle reaches the throat (point "B").


Black holes are snatches in the spacetime fabric and their rim ---known as the event horizon--- vibrates in a very peculiar way that was predicted after decades of restless work by using Einstein's theory of general relativity. Scientists hope that, by detecting events like GW150914, one would be able to identify the modes of vibration of the final black hole (the so-called "quasinormal modes") from the ringdown signal. Detecting the quasinormal modes will be the definitive proof that black holes are produced in a binary merger, precisely as predicted by Einstein's theory.


In our recent work (selected as an Editor's Suggestion and featuring the cover of the current issue of Physical Review Letters), we show that this paradigm is incorrect. The vibrations of very compact objects without an event horizon are dramatically different from those of black holes (their frequency is lower and they last much longer time) and, nonetheless, the ringdown signal produced by these "black-hole mimickers" is identical to that of a black hole.


Kip Thorne among the 100 most influential people...

....and the one with the best outfit on Time!

Kip Thorne, our bet for the next Nobel Laureate in Physics, more badass than Walter White.