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Ask a Physicist
Is there an estimate of the speed of propagation of gravitational waves?
Submitted by Jaime from Canada
Einstein's answer is that gravitational waves should propagate at the same
speed as light. Light in vacuum, that is; not the slower speed light has
going through matter. Or you could say that light propagates at the speed
of gravitational waves: Gravity determines the structure of spacetime,
which in turn determines how things can move. Including light.
But that's not the whole story. Light slows down in matter because of
quantum mechanical interactions with the atoms. We usually think of a
piece of glass as a continuous medium, but on a length scale a millionth
the thickness of a human hair it's not. There are atoms, separated by
about that scale, and the light interacts with the atoms. Changing the
type of atoms, or even the arrangement of a given type of atoms, can
drastically affect the behavior of light. And how big the effect is
depends on the wavelength of the light. At some wavelengths light travels
almost as fast as in vacuum, at others it can't get through at all.
Something similar might happen with gravitational waves. Einstein treated
spacetime as a continuous arena for things to happen in, but at scales less
than a trillionth of a trillionth of the spacing between atoms the effects
of quantum mechanics should show up. Einstein never worked out how to
combine quantum mechanics with gravity. Even today we don't know how to do
that, but we have some idea that spacetime at very small scales might have
an "atomic" structure like matter. Then gravitational waves would slow
down at some wavelengths, just like light in matter. (And light of the
right wavelengths would slow down in vacuum too.)
Because this length scale is very small, it would be very hard to observe
this effect. Most predictions say that LIGO and LISA (like LIGO, but in
space) won't even come close, since the effect should be very small at the
wavelengths they are sensitive to. But they'll be looking anyway, and
people are already looking for the effect in light from astronomical
objects. The odds are pretty long, but if anyone finds such an effect it
will be the first observation of something related to quantum gravity.
Einstein spent half a lifetime looking for such a thing, so you'll hear it
in the news if somebody does find gravitational waves at anything but light
speed.
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