bRz VS Stije > Traction in pulsar timing arrays.. by Bruce en Stije published on 2024-03-01T20:54:08Z Traction in pulsar timing arrays. How could a pulsar timing array be used to measure gravitational waves? LISA consists of three spacecraft that are separated by millions of miles and trailing tens of millions of miles, more than one hundred times the distance to the Moon, behind the Earth as we orbit the Sun. These three spacecraft relay laser beams back and forth between the different spacecraft and the signals are combined to search for gravitational wave signatures that come from distortions of spacetime. We need a giant detector the size of the Sun to catch gravitational waves from orbiting black holes millions of times more massive than our Sun. NASA is a partner in the European Space Agency (ESA)-led mission, which is scheduled to launch in the mid-2030s and we are getting ready for it now! Genre Dance & EDM Comment by Genghis Koen lekkah!! 2024-04-22T14:15:12Z Comment by Pelenatje23 💣💣💣💣💣 2024-04-22T14:01:26Z Comment by DESOTERIK 👌👌👌👌👌 2024-03-12T13:49:12Z Comment by ᴡɪᴛᴛᴇᴋ ᴬᴬᴿᴼᴺ Nice! 2024-03-07T12:26:24Z Comment by Roxanne Amoh 💫 2024-03-06T12:58:11Z Comment by Roxanne Amoh komaardoorkommaardoor🥳🤗 2024-03-06T12:55:39Z Comment by Rafael What if there are no gravitational waves to be found? Isn't gravity just a consequence of our 3D + time dimension? So aren't we basically searching for something within that something? it's a hard game :D 2024-03-02T12:56:18Z Comment by 'bat'art' realy nice 2024-03-02T06:05:34Z Comment by Pierre-Yves Payet 🎠🎡🎢🪩👯 2024-03-01T21:42:45Z