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LIGO stands for the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory.
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LIGO is really two observatories that work in unison, in tandem.
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The LIGO interferometer has arms that are about 2 and 1/2 miles long, 4 kilometers.
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We have a laser.
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The laser produces the purest light you can possibly make.
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It produces light that's so coherent that it's capable of detecting gravitational waves.
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We have these very massive mirrors.
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They weigh 40 kilograms, which is about 88 pounds.
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They're about this thick.
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And they're just the purest material you can imagine.
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The NSF, of course, had to be the source of funding for anything that would be as expensive as this.
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This was going to be a very high-risk experiment.
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It was from its very inception.
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If you think about this in the '70s and '80s, I'm amazed at how bold it was to do this, and visionary.
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It was bold and visionary.
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There's no other way to describe it.
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NSF management, the National Science Board, they had to really step up to that.
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And they had a lot of discussions, brought in a lot of experts.
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There was great debate going on.
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But in the end, the people who thought it could be done won the day.
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And they went after it.
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Gravitational waves carry the record of cataclysmic events in the universe, like the Big Bang.
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Gravitational waves were predicted by Einstein about 100 years ago.
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And they are dynamical perturbations in the fabric of spacetime, ripples in spacetime, if you will.
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A ripple in the fabric of space and time the same way as a ripple on a pond is a ripple in the shape of the surface of the water.
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Nobody really believed that you could ever detect them, because the size of the effect is so small...
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1,000th the diameter of a proton.
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Even Einstein himself never thought a detection would be possible.
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I tried to do this back in the 1960s when I was a student.
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We couldn't make any progress.
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We didn't have the technology.
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In 1968, Rainer Weiss of MIT conceived of a device that could detect gravitational waves.
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The idea was extremely simple.
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And it turns out to be the the basis of LIGO.
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What the gravitational wave does is it stretches space this way and compresses space that way.
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So you exploit that property.
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Put one object here and another object over there.
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And let the gravitational wave go through that system.
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And it will change the space between these by contracting that one and extending that one.
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And I came to the conclusion that if you made this long enough, if you didn't make it a little pipsqueak thing like this, but you made it sort of kilometer-scale, you could probably get these extremely precise measurements.
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1994, Construction begins.
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Nobody had ever made something like this before.
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So there's a lot of technological challenges that needed to be overcome.
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The precision that was required was just amazing, mind boggling.
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The MIT Group has typically concentrated on developing new techniques to make the instruments work and then to work on, also, data analysis algorithms that are well-informed by the understanding of the instrument.
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September 14, 2015.
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The first direct detection of gravitational waves in human history.
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We have observed gravitational waves from two black holes forming a larger black hole.
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Two black holes merging together, literally, nearly the speed of light to produce a bigger black hole.
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How cool is that?
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I said, holy mackerel.
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This is the beginning of a whole new way of studying the universe.
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It's monumental.
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It's like Galileo using the telescope for the first time.
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Every time we have pointed a new instrument into the sky, nature has revealed secrets to us that we haven't known before.
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And so I feel very confident that this is just the beginning of such an era for gravitational wave observations, as well.
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Who knows what we'll see?
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I would love to see Einstein's face if he could read this article that we just put out.
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I mean, he would have been as dumbfounded as we are.
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Because it's a wonderful proof that all of this incredible stuff, the strong-field gravity, is in his equations.
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Just imagine that.
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To me, that's a miracle that (that) happened... man's thinking, and also all the elegance not only in the theory, but the elegance in the experiment.
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I mean, that is a human endeavor that, I think, everybody in the world should be proud of.
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I had to tell you that.