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  • [♪ INTRO]

  • You might remember when scientists first detected gravitational waves back in 2015.

  • It was a pretty huge deal.

  • They'd spent decades trying to prove this foundational piece of general relativity,

  • and the discovery gave us a whole new window into the universe.

  • But decades before all that excitement came two radio astronomers

  • named Russell Hulse and Joe Taylor.

  • They made their own smaller discovery

  • that paved the way for one of the biggest achievements in observational astronomy.

  • Hulse was Taylor's PhD student in the early seventies,

  • and he was using the Arecibo telescope in Puerto Rico to look for pulsars.

  • Pulsars are neutron stars that spin really fast and emit jets of energy from their poles,

  • so from Earth they look like blinking stars.

  • The astronomer Jocelyn Bell-Burnell discovered the first one just a few years earlier, in 1967,

  • after finding some odd-looking data while studying black holes.

  • And in the next few years, scientists discovered dozens more,

  • but pulsars were still kind of mysterious.

  • Hulse and Taylor wanted to learn more about these stars, and they had an idea:

  • if they could find a pair of pulsars in a binary system,

  • they could use information from their orbit to calculate some basic information, like their masses.

  • So Hulse began an astronomical survey, which means he basically just

  • pointed the telescope at the sky in the hopes of finding something exciting.

  • After two years and 32 discoveries of lone pulsars,

  • in 1974 he found...well, something weird.

  • It seemed to be a pulsar, but its flashing was uneven, which was totally out of character.

  • See, usually pulsars flash like clockwork. Literally!

  • The timing of their pulses is more precise than an atomic clock.

  • Bell-Burnell and her fellow researchers actually called the first pulsar LGM-1,

  • because the timing was so reliable that it seemed like a signal from little green men.

  • But this pulsar's flashes varied by as much as 80 milliseconds.

  • So, unless this was an entirely new astronomical object,

  • something seriously odd was going on here.

  • The weirdness of this object actually gave Hulse and Taylor some hope, though.

  • If the variation happened regularly,

  • that would suggest that something was orbiting the pulsar, giving it a periodic tug.

  • And once they broke down the signal, that's exactly what they found:

  • the pulsar had a companion.

  • Even though they couldn't actually see the second object,

  • they could tell a lot about it based on the pulsar's signal.

  • The companion was orbiting the pulsar once every eight hours,

  • in a very eccentric, or oval-shaped, orbit.

  • And it exerted a serious gravitational pull on that pulsar.

  • Enough of a pull that it was probably a compact object:

  • either another neutron star or a small black hole. So, success!

  • They'd found what they were after.

  • But when Hulse and Taylor published their results in 1975,

  • the astronomy world lost its collective mind.

  • This system was like a ready-made laboratory for testing

  • whether or not gravitational waves actually existed.

  • 'Cause back then, gravitational waves were pure theory.

  • General relativity predicted that they should exist

  • and that they should ripple through spacetime itself.

  • And, yeah, general relativity seemed like a pretty solid theory,

  • but this was a really wild consequence, and we had absolutely no evidence of it.

  • Technically anything that has mass and moves,

  • like the Earth or even your hand, emits gravitational waves.

  • But the vast majority of the time,

  • they're so incredibly weak that we have no way of detecting them.

  • But two massive objects, like neutron stars,

  • swinging around each other close to the speed of light?

  • That should make a gravitational splash.

  • In a system like this, the gravitational waves should be

  • big enough to carry away a significant amount of energy;

  • enough for astronomers to measure the effects.

  • Unfortunately, that's not the kind of setup scientists can just whip up in a lab.

  • And it's not that easy to find in space, either.

  • In fact, before Hulse and Taylor came along,

  • we had never seen such a system, like, out in the wild.

  • So people were excited to see what would happen with the Hulse-Taylor pulsar.

  • If general relativity was right, some of the gravitational energy

  • that was keeping the pulsars in orbit should radiate out of the system in waves.

  • As the pulsars lost that gravitational energy, they should drop into a closer orbit.

  • At the same time, as the orbit tightened,

  • we should see the pulsars speed up to conserve momentum.

  • In 1978, Taylor did some follow-up observations on the pulsar's timing, and he found just that!

  • In around four years, the orbit sped up by a fraction of a second,

  • which was something scientists could actually measure.

  • And the amount of orbital energy being lost to the gravitational waves

  • lined up exactly with what general relativity predicted.

  • It was the first observational evidence that gravitational waves actually existed.

  • And now that astronomers were as certain as they could be that these waves were a thing,

  • they could focus their efforts on detecting them directly.

  • Soon after these results were published, the first proposal for a large-scale,

  • gravitational wave detector was submitted to the National Science Foundation.

  • It took about 20 years to conceive and build the sucker, but in 2002,

  • the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or LIGO, went online.

  • LIGO is sensitive enough to detect the expansion and contraction of space

  • as much as 10,000 times smaller than a proton.

  • But for the first eight years of operation, it picked up nothing but silence.

  • In 2010, LIGO shut down for some serious upgrades.

  • The new, souped-up LIGO reopened in the fall of 2015.

  • Days later, it made the first detection of gravitational waves, which astronomers

  • were able to trace back to a pair of merging black holes nearly 1.3 billion light-years away.

  • All told, we've directly detected gravitational waves from 23 collisions,

  • and two of them have been neutron star mergers,

  • systems similar to the Hulse-Taylor binary.

  • Until we found gravitational waves,

  • we relied on light to tell us just about everything we know about the universe.

  • But for the first time, we have an entirely new medium to probe what's out there.

  • And while lots of things get in the way of light,

  • gravitational waves go through everything, because they travel through spacetime itself.

  • That means these gravitational waves give us a whole new window into the universe,

  • and they have a ton to show us.

  • But before we get ahead of ourselves, we owe a lot to the chance discovery

  • by a grad student nearly 50 years ago that led us here.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • And if you want to learn more about pulsars,

  • check out our episode on how astronomers stumbled across the first one,

  • after mistaking it for an alien beacon.

  • [♪ OUTRO]

[♪ INTRO]

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