First observation of gravitational waves
![]() LIGO measurement of the gravitational waves at the Livingston (right) and Hanford (left) detectors, compared with the theoretical predicted values | |
Event type | Gravitational wave |
---|---|
Date | c. 1.4 billion years ago (detected 14 September 2015, 9:50:45 UTC) |
Duration | c. 200 milliseconds |
Instrument | black holes |
Total energy output | 3.0+0.5 −0.5 M☉ × c2[2][a] |
Other designations | GW150914 |
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The first direct observation of gravitational waves was made on 14 September 2015 and was announced by the
This first direct observation was reported around the world as a remarkable accomplishment for many reasons. Efforts to directly prove the existence of such waves had been ongoing for over fifty years, and the waves are so minuscule that Albert Einstein himself doubted that they could ever be detected.[12][13] The waves given off by the cataclysmic merger of GW150914 reached Earth as a ripple in spacetime that changed the length of a 1,120 km LIGO effective span by a thousandth of the width of a proton,[11] proportionally equivalent to changing the distance to the nearest star outside the Solar System by one hair's width.[14][c] The energy released by the binary as it spiralled together and merged was immense, with the energy of 3.0+0.5
−0.5 c2 M☉ (5.3+0.9
−0.8×1047 joules or 5300+900
−800 foes) in total radiated as gravitational waves, reaching a peak emission rate in its final few milliseconds of about 3.6+0.5
−0.4×1049 watts – a level greater than the combined power of all light radiated by all the stars in the observable universe.[3][4][15][16][d]
The observation confirmed the last remaining directly undetected prediction of general relativity and corroborated its predictions of space-time distortion in the context of large scale cosmic events (known as strong field tests). It was heralded as inaugurating a new era of gravitational-wave astronomy, which enables observations of violent astrophysical events that were not previously possible and allows for the direct observation of the earliest history of the universe.[3][18][19][20][21] On 15 June 2016, two more detections of gravitational waves, made in late 2015, were announced.[22] Eight more observations were made in 2017, including GW170817, the first observed merger of binary neutron stars, which was also observed in electromagnetic radiation.
Gravitational waves
Albert Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves in 1916,[24][25] on the basis of his theory of general relativity.[26] General relativity interprets gravity as a consequence of distortions in spacetime caused by the presence of mass, and further entails that certain movements or acceleration of these masses will cause distortions – or "ripples" – in spacetime which spread outward from the source at the speed of light. Einstein considered this mostly a curiosity, since he understood that these ripples would be far too minuscule to detect using any technology foreseen at that time.[13] As a further consequence following from the conservation of energy, the energy radiated away by gravitational waves from a system of two objects in mutual orbit would cause them to slowly spiral inwards, although again, this effect would be extremely minute and thus challenging to observe.[27]
One case where gravitational waves would be strongest is during the final moments of the merger of two
Observation
Gravitational waves can be detected indirectly – by observing celestial phenomena caused by gravitational waves – or more directly by means of instruments such as the Earth-based LIGO or the planned space-based LISA instrument.[30]
Indirect observation
Evidence of gravitational waves was first deduced in 1974 through the motion of the double neutron star system
Direct observation
Direct observation of gravitational waves was not possible for many decades following their prediction, due to the minuscule effect that would need to be detected and separated from the background of vibrations present everywhere on Earth. A technique called interferometry was suggested in the 1960s and eventually technology developed sufficiently for this technique to become feasible.
In the present approach used by LIGO, a
LIGO operates two gravitational-wave observatories in unison, located 3,002 km (1,865 mi) apart: the LIGO Livingston Observatory (30°33′46.42″N 90°46′27.27″W / 30.5628944°N 90.7742417°W) in Livingston, Louisiana, and the LIGO Hanford Observatory, on the DOE Hanford Site (46°27′18.52″N 119°24′27.56″W / 46.4551444°N 119.4076556°W) near Richland, Washington. The tiny shifts in the length of their arms are continually compared and significant patterns which appear to arise synchronously are followed up to determine whether a gravitational wave may have been detected or if some other cause was responsible.
Initial LIGO operations between 2002 and 2010 did not detect any statistically significant events that could be confirmed as gravitational waves. This was followed by a multi-year shut-down while the detectors were replaced by much improved "Advanced LIGO" versions.[37] In February 2015, the two advanced detectors were brought into engineering mode, in which the instruments are operating fully for the purpose of testing and confirming they are functioning correctly before being used for research,[38] with formal science observations due to begin on 18 September 2015.[39]
Throughout the development and initial observations by LIGO, several "blind injections" of fake gravitational wave signals were introduced to test the ability of the researchers to identify such signals. To protect the efficacy of blind injections, only four LIGO scientists knew when such injections occurred, and that information was revealed only after a signal had been thoroughly analyzed by researchers.[40] On 14 September 2015, while LIGO was running in engineering mode but without any blind data injections, the instrument reported a possible gravitational wave detection. The detected event was given the name GW150914.[41]
GW150914 event
Event detection
GW150914 was detected by the LIGO detectors in
The
The trigger that indicated a possible detection was reported within three minutes of acquisition of the signal, using rapid ('online') search methods that provide a quick, initial analysis of the data from the detectors.[3] After the initial automatic alert at 9:54 UTC, a sequence of internal emails confirmed that no scheduled or unscheduled injections had been made, and that the data looked clean.[40][46] After this, the rest of the collaborating team was quickly made aware of the tentative detection and its parameters.[47]
More detailed statistical analysis of the signal, and of 16 days of surrounding data from 12 September to 20 October 2015, identified GW150914 as a real event, with an estimated significance of at least
At the time of the event, the
Astrophysical origin

The event happened at a
−0.036 (90% credible intervals). Analysis of the signal along with the inferred redshift suggested that it was produced by the merger of two black holes with masses of 35+5
−3 times and 30+3
−4 times the mass of the Sun (in the source frame), resulting in a post-merger black hole of 62+4
−3 M☉.[1]: 6 The mass–energy of the missing 3.0±0.5 M☉ was radiated away in the form of gravitational waves.[3]
During the final 20 milliseconds of the merger, the power of the radiated gravitational waves peaked at about 3.6×1049 watts or 526 dBm – 50 times greater[50] than the combined power of all light radiated by all the stars in the observable universe.[3][4][15][16] The amount of this energy that was received by the entire planet Earth was about 36 billion joules, of which only a small amount was absorbed.[51]
Across the 0.2-second duration of the detectable signal, the relative tangential (orbiting) velocity of the black holes increased from 30% to 60% of the speed of light. The orbital frequency of 75 Hz (half the gravitational wave frequency) means that the objects were orbiting each other at a distance of only 350 km by the time they merged. The phase changes to the signal's polarization allowed calculation of the objects' orbital frequency, and taken together with the amplitude and pattern of the signal, allowed calculation of their masses and therefore their extreme final velocities and orbital separation (distance apart) when they merged. That information showed that the objects had to be black holes, as any other kind of known objects with these masses would have been physically larger and therefore merged before that point, or would not have reached such velocities in such a small orbit. The highest observed neutron star mass is 2 M☉, with a conservative upper limit for the mass of a stable neutron star of 3 M☉, so that a pair of neutron stars would not have had sufficient mass to account for the merger (unless exotic alternatives exist, for example, boson stars),[2][3] while a black hole-neutron star pair would have merged sooner, resulting in a final orbital frequency that was not so high.[3]
The decay of the waveform after it peaked was consistent with the damped oscillations of a black hole as it relaxed to a final merged configuration.[3] Although the inspiral motion of compact binaries can be described well from post-Newtonian calculations,[52] the strong gravitational field merger stage can only be solved in full generality by large-scale numerical relativity simulations.[53][54][55]
In the improved model and analysis, the post-merger object is found to be a rotating Kerr black hole with a spin parameter of 0.68+0.05
−0.06,[1] i.e. one with 2/3 of the maximum possible angular momentum for its mass.
The two stars which formed the two black holes were likely formed about 2 billion years after the Big Bang with masses of between 40 and 100 times the mass of the Sun.[56][57]
Location in the sky
Gravitational wave instruments are whole-sky monitors with little ability to resolve signals spatially. A network of such instruments is needed to locate the source in the sky through
For
Coincident gamma-ray observation
The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope reported that its Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM) instrument detected a weak gamma-ray burst above 50 keV, starting 0.4 seconds after the LIGO event and with a positional uncertainty region overlapping that of the LIGO observation. The Fermi team calculated the odds of such an event being the result of a coincidence or noise at 0.22%.[59] However a gamma ray burst would not have been expected, and observations from the INTEGRAL telescope's all-sky SPI-ACS instrument indicated that any energy emission in gamma-rays and hard X-rays from the event was less than one millionth of the energy emitted as gravitational waves, which "excludes the possibility that the event is associated with substantial gamma-ray radiation, directed towards the observer". If the signal observed by the Fermi GBM was genuinely astrophysical, INTEGRAL would have indicated a clear detection at a significance of 15 sigma above background radiation.[60] The AGILE space telescope also did not detect a gamma-ray counterpart of the event.[61]
A follow-up analysis by an independent group, released in June 2016, developed a different statistical approach to estimate the spectrum of the gamma-ray transient. It concluded that Fermi GBM's data did not show evidence of a gamma ray burst, and was either background radiation or an Earth albedo transient on a 1-second timescale.[62][63] A rebuttal of this follow-up analysis, however, pointed out that the independent group misrepresented the analysis of the original Fermi GBM Team paper and therefore misconstrued the results of the original analysis. The rebuttal reaffirmed that the false coincidence probability is calculated empirically and is not refuted by the independent analysis.[64][65]
Black hole mergers of the type thought to have produced the gravitational wave event are not expected to produce gamma-ray bursts, as stellar-mass black hole binaries are not expected to have large amounts of orbiting matter. Avi Loeb has theorised that if a massive star is rapidly rotating, the centrifugal force produced during its collapse will lead to the formation of a rotating bar that breaks into two dense clumps of matter with a dumbbell configuration that becomes a black hole binary, and at the end of the star's collapse it triggers a gamma-ray burst.[66][67] Loeb suggests that the 0.4 second delay is the time it took the gamma-ray burst to cross the star, relative to the gravitational waves.[67][68]
Other follow-up observations
The reconstructed source area was targeted by follow-up observations covering
The ANTARES telescope detected no neutrino candidates within ±500 seconds of GW150914. The IceCube Neutrino Observatory detected three neutrino candidates within ±500 seconds of GW150914. One event was found in the southern sky and two in the northern sky. This was consistent with the expectation of background detection levels. None of the candidates were compatible with the 90% confidence area of the merger event.[69] Although no neutrinos were detected, the lack of such observations provided a limit on neutrino emission from this type of gravitational wave event.[69]
Observations by the
Announcement

The announcement of the detection was made on 11 February 2016[4] at a news conference in Washington, D.C. by David Reitze, the executive director of LIGO,[6] with a panel comprising Gabriela González, Rainer Weiss and Kip Thorne, of LIGO, and France A. Córdova, the director of NSF.[4] Barry Barish delivered the first presentation on this discovery to a scientific audience simultaneously with the public announcement.[71]
The initial announcement paper was published during the news conference in Physical Review Letters,[3] with further papers either published shortly afterwards[19] or immediately available in preprint form.[72]
Awards and recognition
In May 2016, the full collaboration, and in particular
The 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Rainer Weiss, Barry Barish and Kip Thorne "for decisive contributions to the LIGO detector and the observation of gravitational waves".[80]
Implications
The observation was heralded as inaugurating a revolutionary era of
Expectations for detection of future binary merger events
On 15 June 2016, the LIGO group announced an observation of another gravitational wave signal, named GW151226.[84] The Advanced LIGO was predicted to detect five more black hole mergers like GW150914 in its next observing campaign from November 2016 until August 2017 (it turned out to be seven), and then 40 binary star mergers each year, in addition to an unknown number of more exotic gravitational wave sources, some of which may not be anticipated by current theory.[11]
Planned upgrades are expected to double the signal-to-noise ratio, expanding the volume of space in which events like GW150914 can be detected by a factor of ten. Additionally, Advanced Virgo, KAGRA, and a possible third LIGO detector in India will extend the network and significantly improve the position reconstruction and parameter estimation of sources.[3]
Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is a proposed space based observation mission to detect gravitational waves. With the proposed sensitivity range of LISA, merging binaries like GW150914 would be detectable about 1000 years before they merge, providing for a class of previously unknown sources for this observatory if they exist within about 10 megaparsecs.[19] LISA Pathfinder, LISA's technology development mission, was launched in December 2015 and it demonstrated that the LISA mission is feasible.[85]
A 2016 model predicted LIGO would detect approximately 1000 black hole mergers per year when it reached full sensitivity following upgrades.[56][57]
Lessons for stellar evolution and astrophysics
The masses of the two pre-merger black holes provide information about stellar evolution. Both black holes were more massive than previously discovered stellar-mass black holes, which were inferred from X-ray binary observations. This implies that the stellar winds from their progenitor stars must have been relatively weak, and therefore that the metallicity (mass fraction of chemical elements heavier than hydrogen and helium) must have been less than about half the solar value.[19]
The fact that the pre-merger black holes were present in a
The discovery of the GW merger event increases the lower limit on the rate of such events, and rules out certain theoretical models that predicted very low rates of less than 1 Gpc−3yr−1 (one event per cubic gigaparsec per year).[3][19] Analysis resulted in lowering the previous upper limit rate on events like GW150914 from ~140 Gpc−3yr−1 to 17+39
−13 Gpc−3yr−1.[86]
Impact on future cosmological observation
Measurement of the waveform and amplitude of the gravitational waves from a black hole merger event makes accurate determination of its distance possible. The accumulation of black hole merger data from cosmologically distant events may help to create more precise models of the history of the expansion of the universe and the nature of the dark energy that influences it.[87][88]
The
Tests of general relativity
The inferred fundamental properties, mass and spin, of the post-merger black hole were consistent with those of the two pre-merger black holes, following the predictions of general relativity.[7][8][9] This is the first test of general relativity in the very strong-field regime.[3][18] No evidence could be established against the predictions of general relativity.[18]
The opportunity was limited in this signal to investigate the more complex general relativity interactions, such as tails produced by interactions between the gravitational wave and curved space-time background. Although a moderately strong signal, it is much smaller than that produced by binary-pulsar systems. In the future stronger signals, in conjunction with more sensitive detectors, could be used to explore the intricate interactions of gravitational waves as well as to improve the constraints on deviations from general relativity.[18]
Speed of gravitational waves and limit on possible mass of graviton
The speed of gravitational waves (vg) is predicted by general relativity to be the speed of light (c).[90] The extent of any deviation from this relationship can be parameterized in terms of the mass of the hypothetical graviton. The graviton is the name given to an elementary particle that would act as the force carrier for gravity, in quantum theories about gravity. It is expected to be massless if, as it appears, gravitation has an infinite range. (This is because the more massive a gauge boson is, the shorter is the range of the associated force; as with the infinite range of electromagnetism, which is due to the massless photon, the infinite range of gravity implies that any associated force-carrying particle would also be massless.) If the graviton were not massless, gravitational waves would propagate below lightspeed, with lower frequencies (ƒ) being slower than higher frequencies, leading to dispersion of the waves from the merger event.[18] No such dispersion was observed.[18][28] The observations of the inspiral slightly improve (lower) the upper limit on the mass of the graviton from Solar System observations to 2.1×10−58 kg, corresponding to 1.2×10−22 eV/c2 or a Compton wavelength (λg) of greater than 1013 km, roughly 1 light-year.[3][18] Using the lowest observed frequency of 35 Hz, this translates to a lower limit on vg such that the upper limit on 1-vg /c is ~ 4×10−19.[e]
See also
- Gravitational-wave astronomy – Branch of astronomy using gravitational waves
- Gravitational-wave observatory – Device used to measure gravitational waves
- List of gravitational wave observations
- Timeline of gravitational physics and relativity
Notes
- ^ c2 M☉ is about 1.8×103 foe; 1.8×1047 J; 1.8×1054 erg; 4.3×1046 cal; 1.7×1044 BTU; 5.0×1040 kWh, or 4.3×1037 tonnes of TNT.
- ^ The ringdown phase is the settling down of the merged black hole into a sphere.[10]
- femtometer (1.68–1.74×10−15 m); ratio of proton/1000/4000 m = ~4×10−22; width of a human hair ~ 0.02–0.04 millimeter (0.02–0.04×10−3 m); distance to Proxima Centauri~ 4.423 light-years (4.184×1016 m); ratio of hair/distance to star = 5–10×10−22
- ^ Since gravitational waves hardly ever interact with matter, the effects of the gravitational waves on a human located only one AU from the merger event would have been extremely minor and unnoticed.[17]
- ^ Based on , obtainable from the "Tests of general relativity ..." paper (p. 13, "Thus, we have...") and the Planck–Einstein relation.[18]
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Further reading
- Calandrelli, Emily; Escher, Anna (16 December 2016). "The top 15 events that happened in space in 2016". TechCrunch. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
External links
- GW150914 data release by the LIGO Open Science Center
- Gravitational wave modelling of GW150914 Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine by the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics
- "First detection!" (PDF). LIGO Magazine. No. 8. March 2016.
- Video: GW150914 discovery press conference (71:29) by the National Science Foundation (11 February 2016)
- Video: "The hunters – the detection of gravitational waves" (11:47) by the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (22 February 2016)
- Video: "LIGO Hears Gravitational Waves Einstein Predicted" (4:36) by Dennis Overbye, The New York Times (11 February 2016)