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Gerard ’t Hoo VSV `Leonardo da Vinci’ Symposium, TU Delft, March 16, Utrecht University

GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

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Utrecht University. GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. Gerard ’t Hooft VSV `Leonardo da Vinci’ Symposium, TU Delft, March 16, 2007. J.C. Maxwell 1864. The electro-magnetic force. Gravitation. The fourth force:. Gravity is an accumulative force !. All atoms in the Earth - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Gerard ’t Hooft

VSV `Leonardo da Vinci’ Symposium, TU Delft, March 16, 2007

Utrecht University

Page 2: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

The electro-magnetic force

J.C. Maxwell 1864

Page 3: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Gravitation

The fourth force:

Gravity is an accumulative force !

All atoms in the Earthpull all atoms in your

body to the same direction (downwards) !

Page 4: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Curved coordinates

time

Coordinateshight

Page 5: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Near a source of gravity (such as the Earth),space and time are curved

Page 6: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

General Relativity

Page 7: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

There is a “curvature conservation law”

There is also a “matter conservation law”(energy, momentum and forces)

In Einstein’s attempts to find a formula, they did not match !

To make them match, you must assume thatnot only matter (or Energy ) is the source ofgravity, but also pressure !

2/ c

Page 8: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

This you will not notice, under ordinary circumstances

negative pressure (tension)

pressure

The total pressure always cancels out !!!

Einstein had to add an extra term to his equation.

12

3

8

E p

GR R g T

grav. source

Page 9: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

3E E p

For light, and electro-magnetic fields, 3E p

So, light couples twice as strong to gravity as matter !

Light rays bend twice as much asone might expect !

Page 10: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

time

Why does“Dark energy”

make the Universeexpand ? -

Dark energy requiresdark pressurewhich is negative !

3 2

p E

E p E

Page 11: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

The Black Hole

Electromagnetism: like charges repel, opposite charges attract → chargestend to neutralize

Gravity: like masses attract → masses tend to accumulate

Page 12: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

horizon

Where is the gravitational field strongest? The formation of a Black Hole

even light cannot

escape from within this

region ...

Black Hole

Page 13: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

The Schwarzschild Solution to Einstein’s equations

( )2

2 2 222

2 2 2d sid

d 1 d ( )d1

nMr M

r

rs t r q q j= - - + + +

-

Karl Schwarzschild1916

“Über das Gravitationsfeldeines Massenpunktes nachder Einsteinschen Theorie”

Page 14: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

As seen by distantobserver

As

experienced by astro-

naut himself

They experience time differently. Mathematics tells usthat, consequently, they experience particles differently

as well

Time stands stillat the horizon

Continueshis waythrough

Page 15: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Stephen Hawking’s great discovery:the radiating black hole

Page 16: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Electro-magnetic radiation

gravitational radiation

Page 17: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

The photon has spin = 1

The graviton has spin = 2

Page 18: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Heavy gravitating bodies emit gravitational radiation

In the process, they loose energy: the orbit shrinks

Page 19: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

The binary pulsar PSR 1913+16

(Figure from Weisberg et al. 1981)

Page 20: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

(Figure from Weisberg et al. 1981)

Orbit shinks 3.1 mm per orbit

Page 21: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Violent events in the cosmos

Page 22: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

LISA A gravitational antenna

Page 23: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

LIGO Hanford, WaLaser Interferometer Gravitational wave Observatory 4 + 4 km

Page 24: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

VIRGO Gascina (near Pisa) 3 + 3 km

Page 25: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

LISA

Main Spacecraft

Spacecraft # 3 Spacecraft # 2

Secondaries

Page 26: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES
Page 27: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

photon graviton g

The PhotonSpin = 1 Spin = 2

PP PP

PPPP

PPPP

PP PP

Equal charges repel one another ...

Equal masses attractone another ...

The Graviton

Page 28: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

MoonMoon

Moon

Earth

Sun 0 180 360o o o

strength of force This is the wave function of a spin 2 particle

Graviton

Force and spin

Page 29: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

The Universal Force Law:

nst 1 22

CQ Q

ForceR

Gravitation:

1 22

M MForce G

R

Distance

ForceMaxwell & YM:

Page 30: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

There are two kinds of curvature:

Riemann curvature (space and time near Earth)

Ricci curvature (only inside Earth, the real source of gravity)

Einstein tried a formula: 4 GR T Ricci curvature Matter density

But there was something wrong !

(for a curved piece of paper, these are the same, only in many-dimensional space-time, Ricci is more special.

Page 31: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

There is a “curvature conservation law”

There is also a “matter conservation law”(energy, momentum and forces)

In Einstein’s original formula, they did not match !

To make them match, you must assume thatnot only matter (or Energy ) is the source ofgravity, but also pressure !

2/ c

Page 32: GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

This you will not notice, under ordinary circumstances

negative pressure (tension)

pressure

The total pressure always cancels out !!!

Einstein had to replace by4 GR T

12

12

(3 )

( )8

E p E

R T T gG

grav. source