GEO 600 is a gravitational wave detector located in Hannover, Germany. This instrument, and its sister interferometric detectors, are by far the most sensitive scientific instruments ever designedcitation needed. They are designed to detect relative changes in distance of the order of 10-21, about the size of a single atom compared to the distance from the Sun to the Earth. GEO 600 is capable of detecting gravitational waves in the frequency range 50 Hz - 1.5 kHz.1 Construction on the project began in 1995.2
Joint science run with LIGO
In November 2005, it was announced that the LIGO and GEO instruments have begun an extended joint science run. The three instruments (LIGO's instruments are located in Livingston, Louisiana and Hanford Site, Washington in the U.S.) will collect data for more than a year, with breaks for tuning and updates. This will be the fifth science run of GEO 600. No results were detected on previous runs, but the sensitivity of the instruments (and the quality of the data analysis) is continually improving, and once the data from the current run are analyzed, it is hoped that they will reveal perhaps the arrival at Earth of perhaps two unambiguous bursts of gravitational waves. This would constitute the first direct detection of gravitational radiation, and, in the eyes of many experts, would be one of the most significant milestones in the history of physics.
See also
- See Gravitational radiation to learn more about gravitational radiation.
- LIGO, for the two American gravitational interferometric detectors.
- LISA, for the space-based American gravitational interferometric detectors
- VIRGO, for a competing European gravitational interferometric detector.
- TAMA 300, for a Japanese gravitational interferometric detector.
- Einstein@Home, for a volunteer distributed computing program one can download in order to help the LIGO/GEO teams analyze their data
References
- ^ "GEO600 Specifications" (2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ http://www.geo600.de/general-information/history-purpose/
External links
Coordinates: 52°14′49″N 9°48′30″E / 52.24694, 9.80833
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Gravitational wave observatories |
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| Data analysis |
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