Right *now*, LIGO Livingston is fully operational and observing, with a binary neutron star range of around 138 Mpc. Come on LIGO Hanford!
You may check the current detector status at https://online.ligo.org #GravitationalWaves
Right *now*, LIGO Livingston is fully operational and observing, with a binary neutron star range of around 138 Mpc. Come on LIGO Hanford!
You may check the current detector status at https://online.ligo.org #GravitationalWaves
We are excited to announce that our next observing run (O4) is scheduled to begin late May!
We will observe for 18 months!
Virgo, KAGRA and the two LIGO detectors will run together!
Expect many #GravitationalWaves!
Observing plan: https://observing.docs.ligo.org/plan/
Big finish to Chad's @LIGO @ego_virgo talk at @APSMeetings: introducing #GW190412 - the first BBH detection with definitively unequal masses! Read the paper on this detection at https://t.co/VAvCYWcjmm #GravitationalWaves pic.twitter.com/AC60vywsUB
— LIGO (@LIGO) April 18, 2020
Exactly one year ago, @LIGO detected #GW170817, the first #GravitationalWaves from a #BinaryNeutronStar system! pic.twitter.com/sFlOF6lXZM
— LIGO (@LIGO) August 17, 2018
Watch the 2017 #NobelLectures2017 on detecting #GravitationalWaves by @LIGO founders Rai Weiss, Barry Barish & Kip Thorne https://t.co/LcwPMavC4V [Image @NobelPrize] pic.twitter.com/mIZ7kCfNTy
— BIGWaves (@UoBIGWaves) December 8, 2017
Happy #BlackHoleFriday! #GravitationalWaves are helping us to reveal the hidden population of binary black holes https://t.co/J4RHvVr86c pic.twitter.com/vjf5lpeQTm
— LIGO (@LIGO) November 24, 2017
We are happy to announce the detection of #GW170608, #GravitationalWaves from a 19-solar-mass binary #BlackHole coalescence! https://t.co/uLA3cHjIQj pic.twitter.com/StoFwL1TDM
— LIGO (@LIGO) November 16, 2017
It's a race between #GravityAndLight! #GW170817 showed us that #GravitationalWaves do indeed move at the speed of light! pic.twitter.com/RG7TebqBic
— LIGO (@LIGO) October 18, 2017
Scientists saw the explosive counterpart of LIGO/Virgo’s latest #gravitationalwaves using the Dark Energy Camera! https://t.co/GU53Ri7Oww pic.twitter.com/ZFoQh1wyZd
— Fermilab (@Fermilab) October 16, 2017
Scientists both see and “hear” a dramatic cosmic explosion for the first time. #GravitationalWaves pic.twitter.com/ZokfPesike
— NOVA | PBS (@novapbs) October 16, 2017
Have you heard about our new poster campaign to celebrate the detection of #gravitationalwaves? https://t.co/LgJQEHk67e pic.twitter.com/VNpni9o3Ci
— Institute of Physics (@PhysicsNews) February 25, 2017
S. James Gates, Jr. gave history to set the stage for the Celebration #Gravitationalwaves #UMD @UMDscience @UMDPhysics @BlackPhysicists pic.twitter.com/VPTVZI1oil
— Dianna Abney (@Babydok123) November 1, 2016
Chirp! is a social network. It runs on GNU social, version 2.0.1-beta0, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.
All Chirp! content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.