gravity waves

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  • Visitors stand next to a high altitude WiFi internet hub, a Google Project Loon balloon, on display at the Airforce Museum in Christchurch on June 16, 2013. Google revealed top-secret plans on June 15 to send balloons to the edge of space with the lofty aim of bringing Internet to the two-thirds of the global population currently without web access.     AFP PHOTO / MARTY MELVILLE        (Photo credit should read Marty Melville/AFP via Getty Images)

    Alphabet's Loon balloons are helping scientists study gravity waves

    by 
    Igor Bonifacic
    Igor Bonifacic
    09.03.2020

    To compile their report, professor Sheshadri and her team used data that Alphabet's Loon balloons collected over 6,811 separate 48-hour periods between 2014 and 2018.

  • Astronomers find evidence of cosmic inflation, gravitational waves and the Big Bang

    by 
    Terrence O'Brien
    Terrence O'Brien
    03.17.2014

    In the immediate aftermath of the Big Bang it's believed the universe grew at an exponential rate in what is known as cosmic inflation. Well, the first solid evidence of this growth, which would explain the uniform structure of the universe, has been discovered in the form of a curl in the cosmic background radiation left by the Big Bang itself. The "curl," known as B-mode polarization, is believed to be caused by gravitational waves produced during the first fractions of a second of existence. As it expanded and nothingness filled with extremely high-energy particles, waves of gravitational forces would have propagated, not unlike ripples on a pond, leaving behind scars.