New and extremely sensitive instruments are allowing scientists to use a novel source of information 鈥 gravitational waves 鈥 to understand fundamental principles of nature.
鈥淕ravitational waves are the signals that carry information about gravity,鈥 said , a Klarman Postdoctoral Fellow in physics, in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频. 鈥淚f two black holes are orbiting each other, for example, gravitational waves carry information about the masses and spins of the black holes and how the black holes may have formed.鈥
Varma is among six inaugural cohort members in the Klarman program, which offers early-career researchers independence from constraints of particular grants, enabling them to focus on cutting-edge research. The program is in the process of selecting up to six new fellows to start three-year fellowships in 2021.
Varma is using his Klarman Fellowship to research gravitational waves and their sources, which include black holes and neutron stars. And working closely with , the Hans A. Bethe Professor of Physics, he also is contributing his expertise in building models for Cornell鈥檚 numerical relativity research group, helping to test data from black hole collisions against Albert Einstein鈥檚 theory of general relativity.
鈥淰ijay is a world expert at developing what are called 鈥榮urrogate models,鈥欌 said Teukolsky, recently announced as the , from the American Physical Society. 鈥淭hese models tell us how to choose about a thousand values of masses and spins to develop a scheme that can interpolate the supercomputer results to the millions of required values.鈥
Einstein predicted gravitational waves in 1916, based on his theory of general relativity. But gravitational waves are 鈥渘otoriously weak,鈥 Varma said, noting that he and other scientists have been able to gather gravitational wave data since 2015 using 鈥渢he most precise instruments we鈥檝e ever built.鈥
These instruments are housed in the (LIGO), a project initiated by the California Institute of Technology, where Teukolsky, in addition to his Cornell professorship, is the Robinson Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics; and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with collaborators from many institutions, including Cornell.
鈥淰ijay鈥檚 work provides a crucial link between what we do and making the work more useful for LIGO,鈥 Teukolsky said.
Looking for gravitational waves is worth the investment in detectors, Varma said, because these signals 鈥渃ome to us right from the source,鈥 unlike electromagnetic signals in the form of light. Although strong, light gets contaminated before reaching Earth, he said.
鈥淲hen the black holes merge, they release these signals (gravitational waves),鈥 Varma said. 鈥淎nd because they don鈥檛 interact with anything significantly before they reach us, we get information directly from the collision of black holes.鈥
Gravitational wave signals straight from black hole collisions are tested by Varma, Teukolsky, and collaborators against supercomputer simulations of Einstein鈥檚 theory of general relativity in order to discover the ultimate theory of gravity.
鈥淓instein鈥檚 theory, while extremely successful, has some flaws,鈥 Varma said. 鈥淔or example, it does not work well with quantum mechanics, the other fundamental pillar on which modern science stands. We would like a theory of gravity that incorporates quantum mechanics.鈥
Black holes and neutron stars (another kind of extremely dense object) are where scientists expect gravity to be strongest; they study these objects to find 鈥渨here Einstein鈥檚 theory might finally start to break down,鈥 Varma said.
solves the equations of general relativity numerically, but even using supercomputers, calculating a single collision of black holes can take a few weeks to a few months, Varma said. And up to 10 million of these calculations are needed to analyze a single gravitational wave.
That鈥檚 where Varma鈥檚 models come in.
鈥淚 take the set of simulations that have already been done and I build a model based on those,鈥 Varma said. 鈥淭he model interpolates between all these signals. The interpolation, which is a bit complicated, produces a model that is very fast. It only takes a fraction of a second, and it is comparable in accuracy to the simulations.鈥
The team uses such models to analyze the data they find in gravitational waves, in hopes of gaining a better understanding of general relativity. Varma is lead author of research on black hole astrophysics, published in Physical Review Letters in March.
The research field of gravitational waves is 鈥測oung and exploding,鈥 Varma said. A new generation of detectors, some of them space-based, should be in use by 2035.
鈥淲e expect super-strong signals, which are very visible in the data,鈥 Varma said. 鈥淭hey will let us test Einstein鈥檚 theory of relativity to unprecedented levels.鈥
The Klarman fellowship is invaluable to Cornell, Teukolsky said, enabling the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频 to compete for 鈥渢he very best young researchers鈥 and enhance Cornell鈥檚 overall research efforts.
.