Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 6 | Page 29

OPINION DOCTORS' Lounge SPEAK YOUR MIND If you would like to respond to an article in this issue, please submit an article or letter to the editor. Contributions may be sent to [email protected] or may be submitted online at www.glms.org. The GLMS Editorial Board reserves the right to choose what will be published. Please note that the views expressed in Doctors’ Lounge or any other article in this publication are not those of the Greater Louisville Medical Society or Louisville Medicine. THE DIVINE IS in the Details Mary G. Barry, MD Louisville Medicine Editor [email protected] T he signal from outer space came at last, and it came from a billion years ago. At the time, gazillions of galaxies away, there were two black holes that had been spin- ning in orbit around each other for millions of years. They were drawing ever closer, in tighter and tighter circles, like twin sumo wrestlers stomping ‘round the ring, pulsing out huge forces, their gravitational ener- gies banging and crackling and crashing between them - and all while zooming at the speed of light. Finally their combined gravities overcame even that speed. They collided, and boom! They merged into one giant black hole, so dense with gravity that no light could escape. But the shockwaves that exploded out from this massive colli- sion did escape, and bloomed out into the void. Two years ago, they finally came to Earth. Nicola Twilley wrote all about them in The New Yorker, Feb. 11, 2016. Albert Ein- stein first imagined these energy ripples, and called them “gravitational waves” in 1915. Scientific interest grew over time, but only in certain circles. Many people thought it was a crackpot idea that gravitational waves could prove the theory of relativity, itself a concept too big to grasp. Einstein’s great theory stated that “Space and time curve in the presence of mass, and that this curvature produces gravity.” That is the sort of statement that we En- glish-major types strain our brains on. The unbelievably gargantuan gravity of the black hole sucks in all the light waves. None can generate the speed to evade: the light dies there, so to speak. I think of black holes as Hell, in space. Ms. Twilley comes to our aid. “Imagine,” she says, “when two black holes orbit each other, they stretch and squeeze space and time like two children running in circles on a trampoline, creating vibrations that travel to the very edge. These vibrations are gravitational waves.” Apparently, they bombard us from all over the universe, but are so weak they have not yet had an effect we could measure. Dr. Rainier Weiss of MIT and Dr. Kip Thorne of Caltech believed they were real and that they would be able to measure them. With the Scottish scientist Ron Drever, they convinced the National Sci- ence Foundation to give them nearly $300 million, despite vociferous opposition. With that, in about 1990, the scientific team led by Dr. Barry Barish and Dr. Weiss began to construct Dr. Weiss’ design of the Laser In- ferometer Gravitational Laboratory (LIGO), whose detecting devices are so unimagin- ably fine that they measure “a vibration of less than a trillionth of an inch.” Yet these devices are laser beams that are 4 km long, arranged in an L shape. We have two, one in Louisiana and one in Washington. The lasers live in steel vacuum tubes that re- quired 40 days of pumping to empty out every particle of air and dust. They are tuned and balanced and shielded to perfection to filter out interference from the wind, the trucks, the ocean, the movement of wildlife. Dr. Weiss explained that if a gravitational wave hit one of the L arms, it would instan- taneously register as longer than the other (mass curving space), and then the second L-arm would register as shorter than the other (to every action there is an equal and opposite reaction). On 9/24/15, after hundreds of thousands of minute adjustments, that signal sent a billion years ago arrived. It caused a sensa- tion. The LIGO had just hours before gone back online after five years of $200 million (continued on page 28) NOVEMBER 2017 27