LIGO Gravitational Wave Detection Wins Nobel Prize
LSU faculty and students critical in this groundbreaking discovery
10/03/2017

Einstein predicted more than 100 years ago that gravitational waves, or ripples in the fabric of spacetime, would arrive at Earth from a cataclysmic event in the distant universe. The gravitational waves from two black holes colliding over a billion light years away were detected on Sept. 14, 2015, at 4:51 a.m. CST by the twin LIGO detectors, located in Livingston, La., and Hanford, Wash. The LIGO observatories are funded by the National Science Foundation, or NSF.
LSU Adjunct Professor and MIT Professor Emeritus Rainer Weiss and California Institute of Technology professor emeriti Kip Thorne and Barry Barish have been awarded this year’s Nobel Prize in Physics. One-half of the prize was awarded to Weiss and the other half is shared by Thorne and Barish. Weiss and Thorne are co-founders of the LIGO/VIRGO Collaboration. Barish led the final design stage, construction and commissioning of the LIGO interferometers in Livingston, La. and Hanford, Wash.

National Science Foundation Director France Cordova with LSU gravitational wave scientists
at the LIGO Livington observatory .Photo Credit: LSU
The LIGO Livingston observatory is located on LSU property, and LSU faculty, students
and research staff are major contributors to the international LIGO Scientific Collaboration,
or LSC. Gabriela González, LSU professor of physics and astronomy, is the former elected
spokesperson, who led the LSC during the initial detection. Together with other leaders
and founders of the LIGO effort, González made the official statements about the historic
detection on Thursday, Feb. 11, 2016 at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.,
before gathered national science press.
“It was an honor to be the LSC spokesperson during the momentous time of discovery,”
González said. “We are thrilled for Rai, Kip and Barry to be named Nobel Laureates
and are proud of the work done by the many people over many decades in the LSC to
support and continue their vision.”
LSU’s investment in gravitational-wave detection spans more than four decades, and
is among the longest of the institutions contributing to the present discovery. LSU
faculty, students and scholars have had leading roles in the development of several
generations of gravitational wave detectors, in their commissioning and operation
as well as the collaborations formed. Today's recognition in the Nobel Prize in Physics
is in part an outcome of LSU's long-term vision and commitment to high-risk, high-potential
gain scientific research.
More than 1,000 scientists from universities around the U.S. and other countries conduct
LIGO research as members of the LSC. More than 90 universities and research institutes
in the LSC develop detector technology and analyze data; about 250 students are strong
contributing members of the collaboration.
LSU’s pioneering role in this science began in 1970 with the arrival of William Hamilton,
now professor emeritus, who along with Physics Professor Warren Johnson, built and
operated previous-generation cryogenic bar gravitational wave detectors on campus
for many years. Now, LSU Department of Physics & Astronomy Associate Professor Thomas
Corbitt focuses his research on advanced quantum metrology techniques for a future
detector. This represents more than 45 years of cutting-edge research, with state
and institutional commitment, and long-standing multimillion dollar support from NSF
producing educational opportunities for students and postdoctoral researchers, several
of whom have gone on to professorial appointments around the world.
LSU’s campus is located 25 miles from LIGO Livingston in Baton Rouge. LSU has about
1,400 faculty; 31,000 students; and is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as “Doctoral/Research
Universities-Extensive.” LSU is the only research university in the U.S. located close
enough for students and faculty to engage in daily interactions with a LIGO observatory.
LSU faculty and administrators, including Chancellor Emeritus James Wharton, led the
effort to bring LIGO to Louisiana, and the university owns the land on which LIGO
is operated.
“This is an exciting time for LSU and the College of Science. As scientists, we are
in constant pursuit of more knowledge and understanding of our place in the universe.
This discovery, 100 years in the making, is a leap forward in this pursuit,” said
Cynthia Peterson, dean of the LSU College of Science and Seaola Arnaud and Richard
Vernon Edwards Jr. Professor. “LIGO’s history-making work has given us new insight
into our universe. We salute the LSU scientists who contributed to this discovery
and all of the members of the LIGO scientific collaboration.”
The awarding of the Nobel Prize for the detection of gravitational waves represents
an important endorsement of the sophisticated LIGO research initiatives led by the
Nobel Laureates, and the new field of gravitational-wave astronomy. This is also a
great recognition of all the contributors, which include LSU faculty, students and
alumni.
This is the third year scientists from the LSU Department of Physics & Astronomy have
been among the scientific research teams involved with the Nobel Prize in Physics.
In 2011, the Nobel Prize in Physics went to Saul Perlmutter for the observation of
distant supernovas, with LSU Alumni Professor Bradley Schaefer as one of the workers
and co-authors on the prize-winning paper. The key discovery was that these exploding
stars, called type Ia supernovas, appear to be fainter than expected. This implies
that the stars are farther away than previously thought, and that the expansion of
the universe must be accelerating, not slowing down. This work also earned Schaefer
a share of the 2007 Gruber Prize for Cosmology and a share of the 2015 Breakthrough
Prize in Fundamental Physics.
In 2015, LSU Professor of Physics Thomas Kutter and his group of postdoctoral researchers
were members of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory, or SNO Collaboration, led by Nobel
Prize recipient Arthur McDonald of Queens University in Canada, which made the key
measurements by observing neutrinos from the Sun. The Nobel Prize was awarded for
the fundamental discovery of neutrino oscillations and properties.
The Nobel Prize in Physics is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in
Stockholm, Sweden. For more information about the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics, visit:
http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2017/press.html
Additional Link:
Gravitational Wave Science FAQ [with downloadable PHOTOS & VIDEOS]: http://www.lsu.edu/mediacenter/news/2016/09/28GWscience.php
LSU has a video uplink studio with live broadcast capabilities. Contact us to set up an interview.
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Contact Mimi LaValle
LSU Department of Physics & Astronomy
225-439-5633
mlavall@lsu.edu
Alison Satake
LSU Media Relations
225-578-3870
asatake@lsu.edu