Context is the what-next portion of a recent LIGO talk. For those of you that missed it (or didn't pay enough attention), on Aug 17th, they got good data from a pair of neutron stars. 1.7 seconds later, the Fermi satellite got a gamma ray burst. Within a day, the optical guys had found a new spot. Over the next days and weeks, they got data over the whole spectrum, radio to X-rays. (There were 70 observatories lined up to pounce. Everybody wanted in on the action.)
LIGO only works for roughly the audio spectrum. At the low and high ends, the noise goes up. Lots of people are working on how to build gear that will work at other wavelengths. One proposal is to monitor pulsars. There might be stuff leftover from the big bang with a period of a year or so. If you can get good timing from a pulsar, you might be able to see it. I suspect that will take "good" timing to a scale that would astonish most time-nuts. -- These are my opinions. I hate spam. _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.