3 December 2004
Black Holes and Gravitational Waves
Scott Little
Black holes are created when
a star whose mass is greater than a certain limit
(called a Chanrasekhar Limit) collapses and forms
a void with a gravitational force so strong not
even light can escape. Black holes emit Hawking
Radiation, after Stephan Hawking. The Hawking
Radiation is given as
kT = hbarg/(2pi c) = hbarc/(4pi rs)
Where k = Boltzmann's
constant 1.38x10-23J/K,
Hbarc = Plank's
constant divided by 2 pi 1.054x10-23Js,
g = surface gravity at horizon GM/rs^2 with rs
= Schwarzchild radius of black hole with mass
M and G = 6.6742x10^11Nm^2/kg^2 (gravitational
constant).
The Scharzchild Radius predicts
the black hole's event horizon,
which is the point on the horizon where nothing
can escape its gravitational force (1).
Einstein's
General Theory of Relativity first predicted the
existence of gravitational waves in 1915. They
were thought to exist because gravity warps the
space-time continuum. A collision of this warping
with another warping of sufficient strength would
produce a ripple effect. This effect is similar
to throwing two rocks into a pond and watching
the water ripples collide with each other.
In 1961, Joseph Weber of the
University of Maryland developed a gravitational
wave detector device consisting of an aluminum
bar two meters (6.5 feet) long oriented broadside
to the waves. The waves were predicted to first
compress, and then stretch, the bar's
ends, thus causing it to resonate like a tuning
fork. The resonant frequency was predicted to
be below about 10,000 Hertz (cycles/second) (2).
If the bar resonated at this
frequency without being effected by outside forces,
Weber could infer the existence of gravitational
waves. The sensor used to measure this tiny perturbation
was made from a piezoelectric crystal.
In 1999, work was completed on
the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory
(LIGO). The project was a joint effort between
scientists at the California Institute of Technology
and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
The detectors were installed
in two locations, one in Livingston, Louisiana,
and one in Hanford, Washington. As shown in Fig.
1, each detector consists of a 1.2-meter (4-feet)
diameter vacuum tube in the shape of an L with
4-kilometer (2.5 mile) arms. The entire site is
covered with concrete. Test masses with mirrors
are hung from the corner and at each end of the
L. Laser beams aimed the length of the vacuum
tube measure the effect of the gravitational waves
on the test masses (3).
Figure 1. Diagram of the LIGO (courtesy of www.ligo.caltech.edu/LIGO_web/about/factsheet.html).
The detectors are looking for movements on a very
small scale, 10-16 centimeters, or one-hundred-millionth
the diameter of a hydrogen atom. This change is
to be measured over the four-km length of the
tube.
At least two detectors are required
to rule out interference from local disturbances,
such as seismic activity. An identical signal
at both detectors indicates a gravity wave, while
a signal at only one detector can be ignored.
Ideally, LIGO observations will be compared with
results from gravitational wave detectors now
under construction in several other countries.
The causes of gravitational waves
are thought to be events that cause ripples in
the fabric of space-time. A typical event would
be either an explosion of a massive star (supernova)
or the collision of two black holes. One black
hole is not sufficient to produce gravitational
waves, because the event horizon would concentrate
its own gravity.
However, if two black holes were
to collide, ripples in the space-time fabric could
propagate outwards, much like the previous mentioned
ripples on the surface of a pond. This is illustrated
in Fig. 2.

Figure 2. Diagram illustrating
hypothetical propagation of ripples in the space-time
fabric caused by the collision of two black holes.
Diagram by Scott Little.
The force of these waves may be increased by more
collisions with subsequent waves, as when ocean
waves bounce off a dock and collide with incoming
waves. This is known as the Wedge Effect.
The curvature of space-time is
the underlying reason that gravitational waves
are possible. The field equation that defines
General Relativity and the curvature due to gravity
is:
Where Rik = the Ricci curvature
tensor, R = the scalar curvature, gik = the metric
tensor, L = 8pG/3c^2r (Einstein's
cosmological constant), Tik = the stress-energy
tensor non-gravitational matter, energy, and forces
at any given point in space-time, c = the speed
of light in a vacuum, G = the gravitational constant
from Newton's Law of Gravitation,
and p = 3.1416.
The basic tenant of the Einstein
field equation is that the curvature of space-time
is directly affected by the force of gravity applied
by the mass of the object. It also takes into
account the measurement of the curvature (gik
), the non-gravitational forces (Tik), and the
interrelations of fields. In an oversimplified
way it states, "curvature tells matter how
to move, and matter tells space how to curve
(4).
While LIGO scientists have established
noise limits for their system, so far they have
not unequivocally detected gravitational waves.
Because detectable gravitational wave events are
believed to be rare, years of simultaneous observations
by the LIGO detectors may be required before a
gravitational wave event is detected. Meanwhile,
LIGO scientists have proposed an improved detector
with ten times the sensitivity of the current
LIGO.
For more information about the current status
of LIGO, see the LIGO web site www.ligo.caltech.edu/LIGO_web/about/factsheet.html.
For more information about gravitational waves,
consider searching on relevant key words using
a search engine such as www.google.com.
References
1. www.physicstoday.org/pt/vol-54/iss-7/p74.html
2. http://casa.Colorado.edu/~ajsh/hawk.html
3. www.ligo.caltech.edu/LIGO_web/about/factsheet.html
4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_relativity |