LIGO INDIA - SCI & TECH

News: Science for all: On the road ahead for the LIGO-India project 

 

What's in the news?

       The Union Cabinet’s approval to set up a gravitational-wave detection facility in Maharashtra, a ₹2,600 crore project, is one that will consist of a detector called the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO), to be built in the image of the twin LIGO instruments already operational in the U.S.

 

Key takeaways:

       US detection of gravitational waves, in 2016, launched a new era of astronomy.

       A third detector is being built in India as part of the LIGO-India collaboration in order to improve the detector's collective ability to pinpoint sources of gravitational waves in the sky.

       India has had a contested relationship with such projects, including, recently, the Challakere Science City and the stalled India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO).

 

LIGO:

       LIGO is an international network of laboratories that detect the ripples in spacetime produced by the movement of large celestial objects like stars and planets.

       These ripples were first postulated in Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity that encapsulates our current understanding of how gravitation works.

 

LIGO-India:

       LIGO-India will be located in Hingoli district of Maharashtra, about 450 km east of Mumbai, and is scheduled to begin scientific runs from 2030.

 

Significance of LIGO-India:

       India could become a global site of gravitational physics research, aiding training and the handling of precision technologies and sophisticated control systems, ultimately, cementing a reputation for successfully running an experimental Big Science project.

       LIGO-India can demonstrate an ability to reckon intelligently with Indian society’s relationship with science, using the opportunities that Big Science affords.

 

Go back to basics:

Newton’s law of gravitation:

       Newton had postulated that the force that makes any object fall to the ground was also the one that makes heavenly bodies go around in their orbits.

       Newton proposed that this was due to the fact that every celestial body exerted an attractive force on every other body in the universe.

       The strength of this attractive force which, he found, was directly proportional to the masses of the two bodies and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.

 

Deficiencies in Newton Laws:

1. The theory did not explain the reason for the existence of the attractive force between any two bodies.

2. Einstein's General theory of Relativity:

       He proposed that spacetime was not just a passive backdrop to the events happening in the universe. It was not a mere transparent, inert, and static stage. Instead, spacetime interacted with matter, was influenced by it, and in turn, itself influenced events. It was like a soft fabric that responds to a heavy object placed on it, and curls around it.

       General Relativity also predicted that moving objects would generate gravitational waves in spacetime, just like a moving boat produces ripples in water. Because these are ripples in spacetime itself, gravitational waves have the effect of causing a temporary deformation in a body when it comes in contact. Since the spacetime itself elongates or contracts during the propagation of the gravitational wave, everything lying in that spacetime also goes through the same experience.