I'm so happy that there are some documentaries produced with the volume of the background music set to actually be in the background and not drowning the speech👌
@pobinr11 ай бұрын
Zero music would be fine
@al3k11 ай бұрын
Yes, it's pleasant how minimal it is. The less the better really. It's hard to not put it in when editing.. people are scared of silence in media.. :)
@philmccracken201211 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for pointing out the issue with music being way too loud and annoying in KZbin videos! I often make comments about music that's too loud and annoying.
@davidlong204811 ай бұрын
Yes background music most times drowns out the dialog I can't hear whats being said. Seems like the producers and creators of these shows would realize this. This one is fine.
@Klaus29311 ай бұрын
The music issue has, nearly, ruined several otherwise exceptional BBC presentations by Professor Jim Al-Khalili. His pedagogy is far too valuable to be so diminished by such a distraction. I seriously felt the desire to download the programs and remaster the audio, minimizing the music while enhancing Professor Khalili’s narrative. I suppose I could only use it for my personal use due to copyright issues. In the end, the BBC & Royal Institute could, with their production assets, easily remaster and upload. Middle of the night rant, but I stand by it.
@raymondswenson126810 ай бұрын
I live only 30 minutes drive from the Hanford LIGO. They do monthly public tours. And if you have a group of 15 or more, you can schedule a private tour. I did that with my grandkids. Fantastic! Worth a visit to Richland, Washington on the Columbia River. The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is another great center of science research here. And then there is the B Reactor, the first operational reactor on earth, created for the Manhattan Project, part of the Manhattan Project National Historical Park, and the Park Service gives tours. Very worthwhile. John Wheeler who taught Kip Thorne, did much of the theoretical work behind LIGO also worked on the B Reactor.
@jonrutherford6852Ай бұрын
The captioning is the best I've seen anywhere: human-written, precise, and even synchronized with the speakers (no lag). There are millions of people who depend to one degree or another on closed captioning, yet easily 90% of all streamed media ignore this fact. I'm very grateful for the thoughtful and realistic approach of the producers here. Thank you!
@ColinJarrett11 ай бұрын
Hells bells I needed this documentary. In a troubled world, this reminded me of the purity and nobility of scientific enquiry.
@MindBodySoulOk11 ай бұрын
That died with global warming and was buried by covid
@swainsongable10 ай бұрын
"Hell's bells" 🙂 Haven't heard that phrase since my dad passed away a couple of decades ago.
@nyckhampson79210 ай бұрын
I have a lot more questions though ....but yes we need to watch these amazing drs ,engineers, scientists , not only are they typical looking scientists ,which I mean no offence they are 'Clever Trevors', but they are expanding our little knowledge of what's really out there ....in Space 🌌
@SS-qk8oc10 ай бұрын
If only…. The whole history of science is heterodoxy vs orthodoxy.
@virgilmccabe28289 ай бұрын
Why not study gravitational waves they’re a part of the universe and happening every day
@PlakaDelos11 ай бұрын
It's 5:15 in the morning and I couldn't sleep. I started watching this video and I was enraptured. I've always been fascinated by science and have, since I retired, concentrated on learning about fields that interest me. Physics has been my big challenge (mainly the math) but this video opened up an entirely new way of thinking. I was impressed not only by the concepts but the clear presentation of the approaches taken to prove those concepts was fascinating. So, I am saving this video to watch again because I know that there is much I missed or didn't understand and I want to understand. Thank you.
@rayagoldendropofsun39710 ай бұрын
Gravity MOTION is a myth and has been Debunked ! Having doubts ? Chech your BODY internal and external MOTION, even the air U breathe Debunks Gravity by enabling Ocean Waves into rolling MOTION.
@mocharosenberg86359 ай бұрын
gary zukav the dancing wu li masters your t compelled me to share this book with you, i've found a nice twelve minute summary also! kzbin.info/www/bejne/q3m8oJ-KqdiGracsi=sgjHdlFbJp3NPkSL
@Kwisatz_HaderachXIII2 ай бұрын
Wow I just saw your profile picture and assuming that is your cat in the picture, my cat looks identical to yours! At least the face does
@genburke265610 ай бұрын
Bravo! ....what a beautiful film. The signing of the book with all the signatures of earlier Nobel winners took my breath away. Great documentary.
@dougbates80182 ай бұрын
The years of hard graft that went into conceiving, designing, funding and building these amazing precision instruments is a laudable story of scientific endeavour…. And the culmination of that endeavour in making the first actual records of the passing of a gravitiational wave is one of the greatest achievements in physics, eminently worthy of the Nobel Prize award. Bravo to everyone who worked on this wonderful project. Today, 9 years since the first groundbreaking event, the LIGO instruments have recorded dozens of gravitiational wave events and profoundly advanced our understanding of cosmology.
@SmogandBlackАй бұрын
At the time they won the Nobel Prize, Kip Thorne was 77 years old, Rai Weiss was 85 and Barry Barish 81. And I'm so happy that everything went well and they could see their work receive the honours it deserved. They all are alive and well today, BTW 😊... a great day to everybody.
@timothyconnally216710 ай бұрын
It’s amazing to see the universe through the lens of gravity! It’s also ironic the LIGO uses light to detect the waves of one the few non light mediums in order to shed new “light” on science.
@rayagoldendropofsun3972 ай бұрын
@timothyconnally2167 Seeing through the lens of Gravity is no different from closing the eye's shut !
@timothyconnally21672 ай бұрын
@@rayagoldendropofsun397 Ha true indeed!
@kereti7111 ай бұрын
the utter beauty and also the sheer madness of human beings and what we are able to do
@LouAlvis9 ай бұрын
What an ADVENTURE! what a moment in science history! what a heroic achievement by many hundreds of Scientists, living and dead. this soundtrack was such a nice touch." BRAVO to the LIGO teams
@ksnapper9 ай бұрын
Beautiful !!!! Thank you for all of your hard and many, many years of work and determination. 😀
@kin0cho11 ай бұрын
Thanks for an excellent documentary of the awesome LIGO instrument.
@aresaurelian11 ай бұрын
I am pleased that humanity liked the results. It gives inspiration for further research and development. And there are bigger surprises.
@AtomicPunk234 ай бұрын
The level of brilliance required to build LIGO is staggering. It requires so much engineering knowledge in mechanical, electrical, materials, optics, chemistry; even civil engineering.
@Kwisatz_HaderachXIII2 ай бұрын
I built one in my garage in a few weeks. Sadly my mom threw it out when I was at school because she thought it was junk. I actually measured gravitational waves 3 separate times. The data was on my computer that got a virus and crashed and I was unable to retrieve the data. Right now I am building a particle collider about half the size of CERN. I am building tunnels underneath my neighborhood and will be done with them soon and will start building the actual collider. It’s taking along time because I am working by myself and don’t have good tunneling equipment. Nevertheless I trudge on!
@RichardMcLarenАй бұрын
@Kwisatz_HaderachXIII 🤣🔔🔚
@savage22bolt3211 ай бұрын
Thanks for the wonderful video, and a huge thanks for not ruining it with crappy background music. I don't know why some people are compelled to add annoying background music throughout their videos.
@savage22bolt3211 ай бұрын
Sadly, my OP was premature. 16 minutes in and the background noise has driven me away. Constructive criticism: lose the background noise. The subject & the people being interviewed is great! The addition of distracting, monotonous & annoying music ruined the vid.
@buggeringfool717911 ай бұрын
Because they know that their shows won't stand on their own, without additional distractions.
@hydropotamis10 ай бұрын
I can't believe that this awesome movie is free! I love all you smart nerds! I'm a hobbyist physicist.
@jerrycornelius7488 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this release - such an excellent tale of scientific endeavour, now with more of my favourite characters - in HD! ❤
@Arctic-fox71711 ай бұрын
This is. It! Best wishes for the scientist. Video montage is brilliant!
@livinupinthebay7635 Жыл бұрын
KUDOS TO ALL INVOLVED ❤ We are all living in a golden age of science, technology, and wonder. "To infinity! And beyond!" -----Buzz Lightyear
@ceceliaroberts147510 ай бұрын
An hour and forty six minutes. That is how I determine if it can hold my attention that long, the length of a movie. Just imagine the attention span of these scientists who have worked on it for decades! Talk about space time continuum! Taking decades of research and squeezing it into 1:46 just so our intelligence defiicited brains could relate to the signifigance of their findings. that's real time travel! Brilliant!😎👍
@nicholashylton685711 ай бұрын
An outstanding documentary! ❤
@danielmorris467611 ай бұрын
This is fascinating! It's almost too believable that we humans can now detect massive cosmic events that are NOT by means of electromagnetic phenomena, which, since the dawn of human existence until 2015, were the only possible means of sensing electromagnetic waves rather than gravitational waves.. It boggles the mind and it lifts the spirit! What unimaginable wonders await us, if we survive our petty squabbles here on this little sphere we inhabit..
@bobjary938211 ай бұрын
Its ironic that just now through the wonders of communication tech we can spread such fascinating info to such a massive percentage of the worlds population, but just as this is happening we seem to have destroyed a lot of what we have and are hell bent on exploiting and destroying whats left
@fasvi1285 Жыл бұрын
One of the great achievements in experimental physics. I am sharing this with all my physics students.
@Astronetics11 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this and sharing.
@jonathanbyrdmusic11 ай бұрын
I love seeing Peter Saulson in here! Hello friend!
@joependleton62939 ай бұрын
Some of these projects really deserve medals, especially satellite observation modules. We're learning so much because of them!
@toi_techno11 ай бұрын
It heartens me to see these big scientific search projects being funded. Amazing.
@artysanmobile11 ай бұрын
Hear hear!
@kenwhitney914610 ай бұрын
I could fall in love with Gabby Gonzalez! I love her bubbly, infectious enthusiasm! They couldn't have elected a better spokesperson!
@akikalliatakis989210 ай бұрын
Viva Argentina! (And I’m so sorry you beautiful people have such awful governments.)
@sean.butterworth10 ай бұрын
Such a good documentary, thanks! Everything was so well explained, so that even a layman like me could grasp the concepts.
@advancedligodocumentarypro44210 ай бұрын
That means a lot to us, many thanks!
@JurassicMonkey-x9f11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. This is a juicy tomahawk steak of a documentary. Rare and well done at the same time
@jimtownsend613911 ай бұрын
Holy smokes.. An hour and forty six minutes. I figured I’d take a stab at it and see how long it would take me to lose interest. I enjoyed it right to the end. Great documentary.
@DEATHTOTHESHITTERS10 ай бұрын
Yeah 30 min in no science just hyped speculation .
@alanglynn630711 ай бұрын
Exceptional documentary.
@al3k11 ай бұрын
Great stuff. I'm only 8 minutes in and I'm already thinking the same thing I was thinking about this kind of detection before - you really need to have a detector station up past earth's local influences... We need something like the JWST up there for LIGO...
@muninrob11 ай бұрын
something like lisa.nasa.gov/ ?
@endcgm927711 ай бұрын
LISA (Laser Interferometric Space Astronomy)
@al3k11 ай бұрын
@@endcgm9277 oh, gosh.. haha, i hadn't heard about LISA, thank you, that's awesome. 2034.. hope i'm still around to see it!! :)
@sean.butterworth10 ай бұрын
The same thought occurred to me at some point during the movie
@funnycatvideos54906 ай бұрын
Which is why I don't believe they found anything but a anomaly. Just ask them what frequency they detected and the amplitude of the wave. I have watched numerous videos and that's one thing they don't talk about whatsoever. It's supposed to be less than 100 Hz with a Quadra polarized wave at 45° angles. Yet none of them even talk about it. They talk about everything else but what they so-called discovered.
@BestFitSquareChannel9 ай бұрын
I saw the original version. Now this! A thrill, privilege, inspiration. The humanity, humility, generosity on display an explicit presentation of the best our species produces. Thank you one and all involved in bringing this extraordinary story to light. Best wishes. 🌞🤸🏽♂️🫶🏼🖖🏼🥂✌🏼
@JWRay-xh9wl10 ай бұрын
Had a friend of mine take the people who do this on a haunted tour in New Orleans. He and they got aquainted,and he got invited to tour the facility nearby. He said it was one of the most incredible moments of his life to see the facility. He called me when they announced the grav wave indication so excitedly,lol. I understood the level of how huge this discovery was because it opened up so much in space and time science research. Bravo LIGO,Bravo to the teams who spent a lifetime of effort to find an event that was up to now just a fantastic theory.
@pastrop200311 ай бұрын
Great documentary, hope it ends up at something like PBS NOVA so more people see it!
@PalladianPD11 ай бұрын
This documentary is incredible, it really helps you understand the magnitude of the work and of the discovery.
@JeffreyMoyer-ms7nv10 ай бұрын
This is a wonderful documentary, thank you!!
@DaveEtchells10 ай бұрын
I love the old analog oscilloscopes behind Michael Zucker at 38:15 😍
@advancedligodocumentarypro44210 ай бұрын
So did we!
@176309735 ай бұрын
Plug in pre-amps even.
@lordemed111 ай бұрын
Bravo to all those involved!
@TerryGloer27 күн бұрын
I was a teenager when I heard of Weber and his aluminium bars that tried to detect gravitational waves. Shortly afterwards laser interferomentry became the technique. There are too many wonderful people to thank , so to Ray, Kip, and Albert I say thank you thank you thank you thank you THANK YOU thank you thank you.❤❤ From an event a billion light years away so powerful it is the most powerful event since the big bang to an exquisitely balanced experiment twice duplicated we get a dynamical vision of the warped spacetime of the Universe. ❤
@Achrononmaster9 ай бұрын
@43:00 Rainer Weiss huh? It is kind of insane he had the temerity to think of an actual experiment of such extraordinary sensitivity yet that involved geographic distances and logging trucks and earthquakes. Was this era a different time for science? Before the neoliberal (needless) austerity budgets fully kicked in? I cannot help but mention some political economy issues every scientist should know. Congress closed down the SSC, but their excuse was the cost (and the irresponsible SSC administration) which was an invalid reason. Consider, (a) the administers could have been fired and the project kept on track, and (b) there is no monetary cost issue for a sovereign currency issuer like the US government. They do not get their own currency (aka tax creidts, aka scorepoints) from the "tax payer". The tax payer cannot pay a dime in tax until the government, or Its chartered banks, first issue the currency (by fiat or credit resp.). Nor do they "borrow" their own currency from bonds holders --- again the bonds holders cannot purchase a single bond until the government first issues the currency. No one can legally get USD from anywhere else or it'd be counterfeit. (Why do Tsy/FED sell bonds then? It is to maintain a non-zero interest rate, which serves as _basic income_ but only for people who already have money in proportion to how much money they already have. No other reason. It is pro-inflationary, directly, raising forward prices by at least the interest rate floor, and directly raising costs for firms and households who do not have large operating cash balances (so most firms and households).) When you understand this you are thankful the administrators of LIGO were prudent and diligent, since Congress could have at any time been the idiots shutting down this monumental achievement, all because they (Congress) thought they needed to get their own scorepoints off tax payers, when in fact they are the scorekeepers who create the scorepoints (aka. currency) by using a computer to mark-up bank accounts --- no tax payer or bond holder needed. Tax liabilities drive _demand_ for the otherwise worthless currency, the tax receipts are not supply for the monopoly issuer, they are a redemption (that's why it is called revenue, from the French "revenir" ~ "to return back".) Your shopkeeper or private business sales are not really literally revenue, they are income, but it _is_ a trade, in "return" for giving away some stuff, the buyer gives you some tax credits. This is a totally different relation to that of us and the government. The government does not need to "get" its own currency and does not "get" the currency from anywhere except by accounting entries, but it _needs us to need the currency,_ hence the imposed tax liabilities. For a government investor (not a household or firm), the only thing _materially_ preventing the SSC or LIGIO is available real resource constraints. Are there enough materials and engineers? If there are, then in time it can be built. The currency to pay for these resources is not the issue if you are the monopoly creator of the currency. If you pay the going market price for the resources there is zero inflationary pressure. If the government spends more than tax return, that becomes net private sector savings, which helps the economy. The *government net spending* (misleadingly called the "debt" --- since what exactly is a debt to you in your own currency units if you issue the currency by fiat?) *is the private sector surplus.* You want that to grow if you have a growing population. If the economy booms then so will tax receipts rise, automatically, this cools of the inflation (one of the automatic stabilisers), especially if there is tax bracket creep or progressive tax rates. More here for science nerds who need to know macroeconomics: smithwillsuffice.github.io/ohanga-pai/questions/001_basic_ohangapai/
@rmoore85011 ай бұрын
That was an amazing documentary! Beautifully done.
@sanjaya71811 ай бұрын
Great documentary about a monumental advance
@mb592510 ай бұрын
Having visited the LIGO facility at Hanford, Washington, I had a sense of what a monumental accomplishment this was. This documentary filled in a lot of knowledge gaps for me, but it was especially nice to "meet" and hear from all of people who worked so hard and made this project come to fruition.
@corkkyle11 ай бұрын
Such a great scientific (and engineering) adventure 🎉🎉🎉
@llhpark10 ай бұрын
Of course, it comes to mind that a simulation would have its containment points, that is to say, the subjective nature of the perceptions within it, were they to venture far enough with the hypothesis, that the simulation might very well have a set of protocols to diffuse the question via a subroutine to redirect attentions, obfuscate or even manufacture distractions. The question that came early to mind , ( and I'm only 5 1 minutes in at this point ) given the sensitivity of the sensors and equipment, spoke to the possibility that the work being done in the collider could somehow play a part. Thus far, I gotta say, all these folks on camera are so chuffed, their enthusiasm is somehow infectious. :) Hive five film maker.
@AEFisch11 ай бұрын
Asking "why only one" to me is the opposite that in a microscopic amount of time (decades) an event of this magnitude was discovered. So to me, these amazingly large events are common from a human time frame perspective. To now find the secondary effects of one, would be spectacular!
@lanimulrepus Жыл бұрын
Wonderful video!
@bishopdredd534911 ай бұрын
This is amazing, good way to spread the beauty of science.
@johnsmolley194111 ай бұрын
What a wonderful creation that of LIGO, and in no small measure this documentary. Seldom do we get such an intimate glimpse of science in action. and to see it so richly populated by women is icing on the cake. I'm sure some time in the near future that a curious child will see this and a spark ignited that may culminate in another exciting discovery. Thank you, great work!
@MaximAnnen-j1b7 ай бұрын
1:43:55 interestingly for renaissance Kip has not mentioned science as a thing to be universally remembered (but art, architecture, music), but about present time he thinks descendants will consider important gaining knowledge about laws of the universe. Maybe similarly it will be e.g. movies, jazz and skyscrapers?
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
We'll let Kip know!
@AeOdin11 ай бұрын
There was a fun for me moment, when one person was saying that someone else was sort of the idea of what not to do in data analysis, while leaning on the very precise, so precise it is made to move, machine. I say that as a once tech guy, who had to set up alignment of equipment for testing. I loved to keep my workroom locked to all outsiders always.
@advancedligodocumentarypro44210 ай бұрын
He was leaning, of course, on the 40-year-old "detector" of Joseph Weber, now just on display at the LIGO Hanford Observatory. No data being taken!
@marc-andrebrunet53862 ай бұрын
This was an awesome interesting documentary !! 😮👍
@whirledpeas347710 ай бұрын
I wish that more quality sci-fi movies were made 🎬
@johnpeace11499 ай бұрын
Like how close would a gravitational wave need to be near the Earth to be a "problem". Or maybe multiple waves are heading to the Earth. Oh no.
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
These waved went THROUGH the earth. No one felt it. Very weak.
@pvb8762875 ай бұрын
This discovery warrants the quality of the ducumentary.Again man and science has joined together to reveal another mystery of nature. It also links the past with the present, while recognizing those who unselfishly dedicated their lives to the work of documenting the first measurable gravity wave, in history.
@FrankDijkstra11 ай бұрын
Do gravitational waves amplify/cancel eachother, or do they propagate without interaction?
@alquinn857611 ай бұрын
i think if they are like any other wave, they could cohere/interfere with each other
@176309735 ай бұрын
The refract, diffract, absorb and reflect depending on the density of the receiver. Mass changes their direction of propagation.
@cpking711 ай бұрын
Seems to me the largest and longest collaboration of man's greatest minds in an endeavor that had no guarantee of bearing any fruit at all: with Large Hadron, for example, they would be running experiments that were certain to telll us something. Thus the humility of this group of geniuses to dedicate their careers to a search that might find nothing, Pure science is essential.
@funnycatvideos54906 ай бұрын
No they found the God particle . LOL all this theoretical stuff is good for progress I guess. When you make a discovery that nobody can rebuttal without building a billion-dollar machine who can dispute that? Logic dictates that new discoveries would bring some kind of invention Derived from that discovery but instead crickets.
@t.a.r.s498210 ай бұрын
These scientists and experiments are so inspiring.
@mdlahey387411 ай бұрын
A truly marvelous and engrossing film...🎉
@markwrede88784 ай бұрын
Slopes are a more constructive analytic model to pursue than mere numbers. Also it would seem that the compression of mass feeding into a black hole raises its temperature to values that would generate relativistic effects, significantly increasing the mass of that which the black hole captures.
@angharadllewellyn219211 ай бұрын
Best sci doc I've seen. I teach high school physics/astronomy. My students loved this.
@Catch22-k8d10 ай бұрын
Why was the LIGO detector not built somewhere in the desert, far away from traffic and other human actions?
@funnycatvideos54906 ай бұрын
No tax breaks in the desert no funding this is all government-funded and good for the economy basically. Just like war
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
One theory was Sen. Bennett Johnston of Louisiana, a senior member of the Appropriations Committee....
@wannabegeek51910 ай бұрын
I was able to access the preliminary test report the day after on their site. It was a "predicted" test. They had to detect the affect at subatomic level to get the measurement. They did not release that report until 6 months later.
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
We were there, at the LIGO Livingston Observatory. The detection was a COMPLETE SURPRISE. The full launch of Advanced LIGO was still two days away. And as you saw in the film, we were told the day before that LIGO did not expect a detection for another year, or more.
@kenmunozatmmrrailroad685310 ай бұрын
To think there are humans in the world this intelligent is almost hard to fathom.
@babbaracos10 ай бұрын
Superb docu and music! Would love to get the name of the soundtrack and artist if possible!
@advancedligodocumentarypro44210 ай бұрын
The music was arranged by the director, Les Guthman. It was largely written and performed by David Bowie and Philip Glass.
@babbaracos10 ай бұрын
@@advancedligodocumentarypro442 Pfff quite the legends there! No wonder it's so good! Thx for sharing!
@danielash170411 ай бұрын
The simple answer is that the wavelengths of harmonics associated with the reflection of the gravity andromeda has been sending out many magnetic waves in super fast waves to bending through a wall of space itself too understand the frequency that the pass by us is a matter of radio harmony or high blips and low blips
@funnycatvideos54906 ай бұрын
Yes and to call it anything more than high blips and low blips Is a disgrace to sciences a whole. They are going As far as pinpointing that it's two black holes merging straight lunacy.
@joestitz53912 күн бұрын
my question is: has anyone thought or done any calculus on distances between the gravity waves ? how far are they apart. that would indicate the speed rotation and how far apart the two objects are.
@jayhinz515010 ай бұрын
this seems alot more safe and necessary than what they are doing at cern thats for certain i live a couple hours away to and had no idea that this was going on. awesome! great film!
@LordTempist10 ай бұрын
Thank you:) Amazing discovery.
@danielash170410 ай бұрын
From the hill and Heal thats forwards and or backwards to peaks in the spacing and the floating density of motionless spin it like looking at the keepoh of Stonehenge and finding vibrations of the earth literally grounds from upper level and lower toned lines in the vandigraph area lightning wave or a projection of an otherwise powerful force of electric power to drawing in lightning strikes at a precise distance. Ive see ball lightning forms passing through stone walls it blew my mind as to how does it do it again and again it'll take time to understand
@josebonito601310 ай бұрын
To realize that, because AND in spite of the unfathomable size of the universe, the size of space and time as compared to how very brief human being’s lifespan are, etc., it was I’m sure assumed and understood that those detectors could have been “listening” if you will for a long long time to register something of this magnitude, something as historic and amazing as what happened. On top of all of that, to happen when they’d not even have all the sensors or additional tools they had already developed to consolidate this project into a fruitful one, is, to me at least, a miracle, a sort of divine or spiritual reminder that reaffirm my believe in something that although intangible, unorthodox, invisible, and outside of, I feel, of any of the scientific disciplines, schools of thoughts, one side, or dogmas, beliefs, religious, etc., or even school of thoughts,philosophical, theories from, pretty much, every scientific discipline, and so on. So, for something like this to happen, is kinda like what witnessing a miracle would mean to a devoted Christian, except to me, they are one and the same cause I believe they come from the same place. These pioneers should be lauded and elevated and appreciated for the time and effort and passion they employ in advancing, improving, and working towards a general betterment of our species. Thank you lord, whoever, wherever, whenever, and ever, you may be, were or will be.
@gailtonnesen11 ай бұрын
Amazing documentary - but the background music is really distracting and makes it difficult to focus on the dialogue and narration. Would love to be able to watch this again without the background music.
@Gunni19723 ай бұрын
Yes i hear, but why did i not get to see the "merger" of August 17? There was "Visual evidence" they said, and all i got was a false-color dot. And how do you effectively prove the point without the visual before/after shot? What did the echo reveal? What is the SPEED of those gravitational waves? Is it "variable" as well? Because in my mind, that would be the logic conclusion.
@davidinfante85424 ай бұрын
Yeah I sent my proposal to the NSF in 1980 at the time the NSF is also reviewing Lago Projects so what did they do with my proposal they sent my proposal group to be reviewed how stupid was that they were my competition
@davidinfante85423 ай бұрын
Mode swing is a better way to detect GW up to 100 mhz in a fiber optic laser detection system Two laser arms is to old school and bulky
@Kyedo202211 ай бұрын
I believe the gravitational wave must be in the center of the structure as a whole, meaning no measurement can be make until the actual wave is in the center and both sides are geometrically stable, tho their overall length is contracted.
@michaeld.coulombesr.58311 ай бұрын
I, as one, did the military thing when I was a young man, 63' - 66'. along about 2004-2012, I got two different types of cancers, lymphoma....first 2004, prostate....second 2008, if not for the VA any one of which could have killed me, I turned 80 years old in July 2023. Now I have lived long enough to see the LIGO experiment finally start working. Back in 1963 or so Scientists predicted that we Would have FUSION REACTORS by 2015. I'm still waiting to see that. They need to hurry up! I had another cancer in 2018 lung, if not for the VA I would be dead by now, and 'now' is the 7th of January 2024. Michael said that, bye for now my friends.
@bokchoiman11 ай бұрын
Thank you Kip! Interstellar was outstanding!
@yoxat110 ай бұрын
If you walk from one place to another you are actually changing the position of the moon. It's not much, but it does affect. In fact, you actually change the entire universe to a very tiny degree.
@semidemiurge11 ай бұрын
I still can't wrap my head around that this was possible, let alone done. To have the determination to pull this off, knowing that it was so difficult...takes very special people. Humans can do incredible things and I feel a bit proud of our species. This documentary was an exceptional testament. I particularly liked the part where they devoted so much effort attempting to prove the initial signal of the binary black hole merger was fake/false. Cheers to all involved.
@andrewadius14211 ай бұрын
Love it!!
@NoferTrunions10 ай бұрын
what was that opening music?
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
David Bowie's "ABDULMAJID," his homage to his wife Imam.
@danielash170411 ай бұрын
Each planet placement has a pathway of the spacing process of the vibration of the sun's different layers of warped space which is canceling and uncanceling the wavelength dimensional placement of numbers of gradually increasing and decreasing speeds and speeds of vibrations is the most telling they come in slow and then zip out faster than the normal space itself is warped enough to make it work this way it has spaceings and the floating density is measured in the timing to the wavelength dimensional placement and displacement
@davidciesluk24335 ай бұрын
If people would take the initiative to understand what LIGO is all about, there would be many who would experience a true awakening, as the concept is remarkably simple. The words, the physics, et al, can be intimidating. Understanding that LIGO is simply an instrument that measures an interference in a beam of light is not difficult. What got the hair to stand on the back of my neck was how the strength and distance of the black hole collision is determined, using Einsteins formula to arrive at 200,000 measurements based on different sizes and masses of 2 bodies colliding, and doing reverse calculations. Simple concepts, in my opinion. When Weiss, Thorne, Barish, et al explain that decades of work culminate in their respective discoveries, one can see that the time element is both long...and a drop in the bucket. Phenomenal work by phenomenonal people. ...so, do we really want to cure cancer? (I digress, my apologies)
@sdl199810 ай бұрын
what did she say causes the “chirp”? because that immediately reminded me of the “bloop” sound they recorded in the ocean years ago.
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
The "chirp" is the sound of the gravitational wave as the two black holes collide. The sound is in our audio range, we can hear it.
@sclogse12 ай бұрын
The waves are so subtle at our distance I wonder if we can observe matter near the black holes and see changes.
@zeroonetime10 ай бұрын
I.T. I.S. the Law of no Lows switching the 010 uni-verse
@dond66810 ай бұрын
How fast was this gravitational wave traveling?
@rsa451010 ай бұрын
Gravitational waves travel at the speed of light.
@danwilson104011 ай бұрын
I wonder if Albert could have witnessed this ,would he have looked smug? Did he have any doubt at all? Or just a faint twinkle in his eyes saying “ I told you so ,I knew it!” What a guy What a team What relief they must have felt collectively.
@peterwiles129910 ай бұрын
AE had concluded gravitational waves would be undetectable.
@nickinurse643311 ай бұрын
This is nuts trying to do this precise measurement on the active moving Earth! Why is this measurement not being done between the space station and the Moon?
@WR3ND10 ай бұрын
Thanks. I have been participating in BOINC Einstein@Home and MilkyWay@Home at this time. Very cool to see this astronomy and discovery in action.
@johnpeace11499 ай бұрын
They mentioned that the first wave was only detectable by Ligo. The wave is "gone". IF there was another detector somewhere that could be synchronized with the detection of the wave then the observation could be confirmed.
@funnycatvideos54906 ай бұрын
No you're asking too many questions just take their word for it. You cannot find any scientists that even attempt to have a rebuttal against this argument.
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
There were three observatories that detected the signal, within the correct milliseconds that separated them, given the speed of light. The two LIGO detectors, in Louisiana and Washington State, and the Virgo detector outside of Pisa, Italy.
@drmantistoboggan28703 ай бұрын
@@funnycatvideos5490the reply under yours confirms you have no understanding. 😂
@Stevros99910 ай бұрын
This went well with the Tropical Thunder bubble hash i got from the store ☺️
@funnycatvideos54906 ай бұрын
You would have to be high to think they can isolate every single minute noise from the universe and single out a theoretical G wave that they invented. It was discovered at the same time The project needed more funding. It's good for the economy and good for the progress of science but I'm not falling for theoretical propaganda at this point.
@deanalan682410 ай бұрын
Does space smell? Seriously, I don't know. I'm sure tests have been done, but, I have never heard anything about it. Can someone please answer this?
@WR3ND10 ай бұрын
Can I buy the Blu-Ray somewhere?
@advancedligodocumentarypro4425 ай бұрын
Blu-rays are not available yet, but send an email to xplrfilms@me.com and we'll let you know...thanks for your interest!
@tigertiger169911 ай бұрын
For me, this discovery & the voyage of Apollo 8 are the two of mankind’s greatest..: when we first left/ gravity of our home world.., and have now detected a phenomenon that is outside our natural senses… to a accuracy that is beyond comprehension..👍
@danielash170411 ай бұрын
I think black holes are like cancellation points for vibrations to enter into a non vibration level
@paulbk781011 ай бұрын
Most life affirming 1:46:53 I've ever spent. My DOB = 1948.
@CL_Audio_Tuning3 ай бұрын
Im getting worried that too many current scientists still depend on 2D images/animations for explaining. We need to Level Up with this, especially if we want to learn about higher dimensions! 🤓 Animations need to be in 3D!! Think of space as a block of jello and not a flat sheet!!