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Ask a Physicist
If gravitational waves are successfully detected, can we expect that knowledge
to lead to new kinds of technological advancements?
Submitted by Jo from the USA
Even though we haven't detected gravitational waves yet, there have already
been technical advancements spun off from the search effort.
The first spinoff I know of is from the 1970s and is called Pound-Drever
locking. It was a big practical improvement in using laser interferometers
to measure small distances. In principle an interferometer measures length
changes by letting the mirrors swing freely and counting the light/dark
cycles in the output (the light leaking out of the end) to see how many
light wavelengths a mirror moved. In practice an interferometer is more
sensitive if you keep it locked, or force the length between the mirrors to
stay a certain number of wavelengths of light of the laser that's beamed
into it. And it's easier to keep it locked if you mess up the laser very
slightly. You can see how much the mirrors want to move due to
gravitational waves (or anything else) by watching how much power is needed
to hold them in lock. Ron Drever developed it with LIGO in mind, but
people working with other precision measurements quickly saw its potential
and now it's fairly common in industrial settings.
Then there are engineering things. LIGO's 4km arms have been called
(correctly) "the biggest holes in the Earth's atmosphere." Building them
pushed vacuum technology to the limit and then redefined the limit. The
engineering firms who did it learned lessons I'm sure they'll apply on
future projects, which will look easy by comparison.
These spinoffs would have happened eventually even without the search for
gravitational waves. But having that exciting goal attracted some very
bright people to work on the problems who otherwise would have been
interested in something else. And because the gravitational wave
application is much more challenging than the practical applications, these
people had to push much harder than if they were working on the practical
stuff directly. Similarly, I don't expect the eventual detection of
gravitational waves to directly produce any practical spinoffs. But the
excitement it will generate will get more people interested in pushing
lasers and vacuum technology and other things related to detection, which
will indeed produce practical spinoffs.
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