MiniGRAIL Online 24
An anonymous reader writes "MiniGRAIL - the first spherical resonant mass gravitational wave detector in the world - is now taking data!!! The MiniGRAIL (Gravitational Radiation Antenna In Leiden) detector is located at the Kamerlingh Onnes Laboratory of the Leiden University (The Netherlands). The MiniGRAIL detector is a cryogenic 68 cm diameter spherical gravitational wave antenna made of CuAl(6%) alloy with a mass of 1400 Kg, a resonance frequency of 2.9 kHz and a bandwidth around 230 Hz, possibly higher. The quantum-limited strain sensitivity dL/L would be ~4x10-21. The antenna will operate at a temperature of 20 mK. An other similar detector is being built in São Paulo, which will strongly increase the chances of detection by looking at coincidences. The sources we are aiming at are for instance, non-axisymmetric instabilities in rotating single and binary neutron stars, small black-hole or neutron-star mergers etc."
so tread carefully! (Score:5, Funny)
Please, those of you located equidistant from the two, don't jump, stomp your feet, or drop heavy books. They rely on asymmetry to weed out false signals, and you folks straddling the middle could throw it off.
Remember, we must all do our bit for science.
Google Translation Please (Score:3, Funny)
What? (Score:2, Insightful)
And oh, the name is kinda lame. They could have at least brainstormed a bit and come up with another acronym like holyGRAIL or something.
Re:What? (Score:5, Informative)
that are predicted to exist by various versions of
relativity.
This is why they are looking for things like black
hole mergers - because those are supposed to give
off major gravity ripples that could hopefully be
seen by our puny labs on Earth.
I am curious how their theoretical resolution
measures up to the bigger projects like LIGO. I am
also curious how much it costs to keep that much
mass this cold continuously. You need a huge
dilution fridge which would consume some unholy
amount of liquid Helium 4. That's assuming you
got no He 3 leaks. Costs please...
Re:What? (Score:2, Interesting)
I RTFA'ed.
Looks like for some frequencies they will be in the
same ballpark of sensitivity as GEO which is nice
since I always doubted theoretical estimates from
GEO and LIGO as being too optimistic. If they can
get to these sensitivities then maybe the big boys
can get there too.
Oh, and given what I heard about Kadel (their dewar
maker of choice) I reiterate my doubts about He 3
leaks. Why not Oxford? And how much does their
setup cost to run continuously?
Re:What? (Score:2)
Re:What? (Score:3, Informative)
The changes are VERY tiny, something like 1 part in 10^20, so detecting them is not easy.
Existing detectors measure tiny changes in the length of bars of metal. Results are borderline at best.
Straight-forward detectors like LIGO and the much larger space-based proposal whose name I have forgotten for
Whoa. (Score:3, Insightful)
Someone bring me the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch! "Bless this, O Lord, that with it thou mayst blow thine slashdot posting to tiny bits, in thy mercy."
Re:Whoa. (Score:2)
IANAPhysicist, but I'll take a crack at it.
-cryogenic = extremely cold
-68cm CuAl sphere = ~2 1/4 foot metal sphere made of a copper/aluminum alloy that is 6% "parent" metal (th
Re:Whoa. (Score:2)
-68cm CuAl sphere : I think that would be 6% Al, 94% Cu.
-Mass of 1400kg : right
-Resonant frequency 2.9kHz : right. Moreover, a passing gravitational wave of this frequency will excite oscillations in the spere, so it amplifies gravity waves at that frequency and converts them to oscillations that can be measured by more conventional sensors.
-Bandwidth of 230 Hz : Any resonant system has a particular frequency at which it likes to oscillate. A small input can cause large-amplitude os
Errrr.....what? (Score:1)
Wha...?
We Don't Need This (Score:4, Funny)
What's the frequency, Kenneth? (Score:2, Interesting)
No Knights who say Ni? Dangit! (Score:2)
That naughty naughty Zoot, leaving the grail shaped beacon on again!
Detection parameters? (Score:5, Interesting)
The reason I ask is that not only does this thing have immense cool value, similar detectors might be very handy for SETI. We know practically nothing about the gravity wave spectrum; it's perfectly possible that the reason we can't find any alien communications with radio telescopes is because everybody's communicating with gravity waves.
So I'm eager to find out what this thing is capable of seeing.
Incidentally, I'm getting slightly disturbed how similar modern gravity wave detectors are getting to those described in David Brin's Earth. If anyone invents a strange new form of physics for manipulating singularities called cavitronics, I for one wish to emigrate to Mars.
Re:Detection parameters? (Score:1)
Copy & paste (Score:2)
so THAT's how it feels (Score:1)
Wait a second ... (Score:1)
Re:Wait a second ... (Score:2)
Actually, one of my classmates took a tour of the LIGO facility as part of an ASME conference and "it's cool" was basically the answer she got. It sounded, however, like this one only has a limited frequency range it can detect. Maybe LIGO detects a different range or at least a broader one. It also operates differently (laser beam in a vacuum instead of big ball in a freezer), so I suppose there's probably a