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1.3 billion years ago
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in a galaxy far, far away
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two black holes merged
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As they violently spiraled into each other
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They created traveling distortions in the fabric of space-time
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gravitational waves
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in the last tenth of a second
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the energy released in these waves
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was 50 times greater
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then the energy being released by everything else
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in the observable universe combined
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It's like an awe-inspiring kind of energy
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after spreading out through the universe at the speed of light for over a billion years
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the waves reached earth, where they stretched and squeezed space
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such that two light beams traveling in perpendicular pipes were put slightly out of step
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allowing humans to detect the existence of
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gravitational waves for the first time.
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That's a simple enough story to tell but
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what I found out when I went to visit
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professor Rana Adhikari at Caltech is
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that it hides the absurdity of just what
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was required to make that detection.
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There's a lot of things about
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gravitational waves which are absurd
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*Humming simulation of gravitational waves
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Is that.... is that it? [RA]: That's it, yeah.
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The main problem with detecting
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gravitational waves is that they're tiny
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they stretched and squeezed space by
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just one part in 10 to the 21.
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That's the equivalent of measuring the
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distance between here and Alpha Centauri
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and then trying to measure variations in
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that distance that are the width of a human hair.
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To detect such tiny wiggles
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you have to measure over as large
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distance as possible, which is why the
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arms of the interferometers are four
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kilometers. And even with arms this long
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gravitational waves vary the length of
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the arms by at most 10 to the minus 18 meters
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so the detector has to be able to
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reliably measure distances just 1/10000
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the width of a proton. It's the tiniest
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measurement ever made.
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So how is it possible to measure that
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considering all the other sources of
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vibrations and noise in the environment,
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like earthquakes, traffic, and electrical storms.
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Well for one thing the mirrors are the
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smoothest ever created.
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They weigh 40 kilograms or 90 pounds and
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are suspended by silica threads just
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twice the thickness of a hair to isolate
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them from their environment
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and even then the only way to be certain not to
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be tricked by environmental noise was to
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build two detectors far apart from each other
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in reasonably quiet locations that
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allows you to distinguish between local
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noise which would appear only one side
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and gravitational waves which would pass
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through both sides
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almost simultaneously
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I'm in a building that contains a 1 to 100 scale
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of LIGO, the gravitational wave detector.
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The next challenge is the laser.
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Whoa, whoa.
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That's a lot of stuff.
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You need a laser that can provide one, and exactly one wavelength.
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You can imagine, if your laser
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wavelength is changing and you're trying
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to use interference of light waves to
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make this measurement it's never going
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to work because it's something like
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trying to measure this distance but your
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ruler stick is constantly changing back
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and forth you can't tell how many inches this is.
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All this equipment, at least
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three-quarters of it, all we're trying to
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do is make the laser more stable, and by
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the end of the day what we've achieved
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is something which has a stability of
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one part in 10 to the 20. What does that mean...
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That's a hundred billionth of a trillion.
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That's kind of what we end up with.
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The best lasers for this purpose have a
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wavelength of 1064 nanometers. That's
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infrared light. But this presents a problem.
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How can you measure 10 to the minus 18 with 10 to the minus 6
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wavelength of light?
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Yes, I wish more people would ask this question.
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It's great for this animation
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to show such a large shift in the
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wavelength but the reality is, it's only
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one trillionth of a wavelength that the
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arms are shifting in length.
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It seems obvious that you can measure half a
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wavelength because that will cause the
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light to interfere with itself.
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Yeah, but that's fully. That will go from
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completely dark to completely bright
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So are you looking at, like, slightly darker
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and slightly brighter?
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Yeah and the limit here at how good we
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can measure this difference between dark
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and bright has to do with the, the fact
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that the light is discrete. It comes in
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discrete chunks which are called photons.
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The variation in the number of photons
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hitting the mirrors at any instant due
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this quantum uncertainty is proportional
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to the square root of the total number
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of photons. What this means is the more
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photons you use, the smaller the
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uncertainty gets, that's a fraction of the total.
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This is why the laser power in the arms is one megawatt.
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That is enough energy to power a thousand homes, in a light beam.
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And a megawatt, you know
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*snap* boom, they won't even rip your head off.
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Just, vaporized be just a smoking stump.
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Even with a perfect laser and one
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megawatt of power, anything the light
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hits would interfere with it,
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even the air, so all the air in the arms
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of the detectors had to be eliminated
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and it took 40 days to pump down to just
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a trillionth of atmospheric pressure and
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the tubes were heated up to the
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temperature of the oven to expel any residual gases.
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They pumped out enough
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air to fill up two and a half million
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footballs, making it the second largest
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vacuum in the world after the Large Hadron Collider.
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Now here's something most people don't think about
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which is that gravitational waves stretch
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space-time so light traveling through
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that space should be stretched as well.
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If everything is stretching how do you
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know anything is stretching?
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How do you know anything is stretching?
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That's the conundrum.
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It doesn't make any sense!
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This whole thing is bogus shut it down!
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I would send a laser beam down this tube
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and then wait for it to come back and
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then i would say "well nothing happened"
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because the space got stretched and the
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laser wavelength got stretched
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Its...It looks the same if you got it stretched or not stretched.
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It doesn't make any sense
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well it's sort of a matter of timing is
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how it works.
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So the amount of time it takes for light
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to go down this tube and come back is
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very short.
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However the wave... the gravitational wave
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when it comes through its doing the slow thing like
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*low humming*
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this noise I made, which is low. Its this
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it's this slow stretching, its only a
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hundred times per second. And it's true
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when the wave comes through the light
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which is in there it actually does get stretched.
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And... and then that part doesn't...
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doesn't do the measurement for us but
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um.. now that the space is stretched that
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laser light is like come and gone
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it's out of the picture. We're constantly shooting
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the laser back into the system so the
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new fresh light now goes through there
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and has to travel a bigger distance than the light before.
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And so by looking at how this interference changes with time
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and keeping the laser wavelength from
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the laser itself fixed, we're able to do the measurement.
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So what was needed to detect gravitational waves?
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Well, a megawatt of laser power to
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minimize shot noise of exactly one wavelength
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because we're trying to measure just a trillionth of that wavelength,
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continually inserted to replace older light
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that's been stretched and squished,
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in the world's second-largest vacuum chamber at just a
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trillionth of atmospheric pressure,
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hitting the smoothest mirrors ever created,
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suspended by silica threads,
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at two distant sites to eliminate noise,
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with four kilometer long arms to
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increase the magnitude of gravitational
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waves to just a thousand of the width of a proton.
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You know what we already do
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daily in here is what I would have said
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is impossible if you asked me about it 20 years ago.
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One of the things that was
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most interesting for me to learn was
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what is limiting the sensitivity of the
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detectors today, and it turns out it is
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quantum mechanics and essentially you can think of it
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like a Heisenberg uncertainty principle, we've got two
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things and together their uncertainty
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has to be bigger than a certain value.
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Luckily for us we are only trying to
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measure one thing here, we're not trying
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to measure two things at the same time.
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All we want to know is how much more
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this arm get stretched from that arm
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and that's... that's the key point which people
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did not understand until recently.
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The way to build these systems is such that
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they're extremely good in measuring one
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thing and that all of the uncertainty
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which comes from quantum mechanics is
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completely crammed into this other thing
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that we don't care about.
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I feel like we're getting down to these levels of
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nature where it seems like nature
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doesn't want you to go any further.
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But, through our ingenuity we're figuring out
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ways to engineer quantum noise, I think
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that's such a remarkable concept
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and I look forward to the results
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that it's going to bring.
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I think the next logical step is to go from
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two signals to detecting all the black holes
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in the universe all the time.
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It's not like an alien civilization level of
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technology it's just... we have to do a lot better
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than what we're doing now but it's
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I see it sort of within... within our grasp