Originally posted by wolram
the search for "gravity waves", is ongoing, i cannot comprehend
all the consequences if they are not found, but i understand
they won't be minor.
anyone have thoughts on this?
To (hopefully) clarify another possible confusion in terminology:
- "gravitation radiation" (the subject of this thread) has been "observed" in at least one binary pulsar (a pair of closely orbiting neutron stars), in the sense that the orbits appear to be changing in a way which implies a loss of energy in the system. The energy loss is hypothesised to be gravitational radiation, and the observed and predicted changes in the pulsar's orbit are consistent with GR.
- "gravitational waves" have not yet been detected, though LIGO (now up and running) and LISA (set to be launched in 2011) are expected to make positive detections.
The gravitational radiation from binary pulsars - at least, those we've found to date - is too weak to be detected by LIGO. However, if a neutron star binary (or a black hole-neutron star one) were to coalesce, the death spiral
would generate strong enough gravitational radiation for LIGO to detect. If a suitably distant* NS-NS coalescence were observed in EM (especially in gamma!), and the expected gravitational radiation were not detected, GR would be likely be in trouble.
By the time LISA goes live, son-of-LIGO should have detected at least one death spiral (and several other violent events besides).
*we don't want it to be close - the gravitational radiation would certainly be detected, but no humans would be left alive to record it!