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LIGO and gravitational wave astronomy: ten years after the first detection.

Europe/Paris
200/0-Auditorium - Auditorium P. Lehmann (IJCLab)

200/0-Auditorium - Auditorium P. Lehmann

IJCLab

236
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Tito Dal Canton (IJCLab / IN2P3 / CNRS)
Description

Zoom link:

https://ijclab.zoom.us/j/99201806082?pwd=TWyItzFOvQWbfS40jYyMS1rCQasPIr.1

Meeting ID: 992 0180 6082
Passcode: a2c

 

    • 11:00 12:00
      LIGO and gravitational wave astronomy: ten years after the first detection. 1h

      Ten years ago LIGO made the first direct detection of gravitational waves, emitted by the merger of two black holes about 1.3 billion years ago. Now, over 300 gravitational wave events have been observed by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaborations. Earlier this year, gravitational waves were detected from a black hole merger very similar to that first event in 2015, but this time with three times higher signal-to-noise ratio. This was thanks to the improvements in sensitivity that have been achieved in LIGO and Virgo in the past decade. I will talk about the LIGO detector improvements that got us to this point, and the plans for future improvements and observing runs.

      Orateur: Peter Fritschel (MIT)