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Exactly 100 years ago, in 1916, Albert Einstein
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predicted the existence of gravitational waves, ripples
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in the fabric of spacetime that are produced
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by cataclysmic astrophysical events,
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such as the collision of two black holes.
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As they travel across the universe,
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gravitational waves stretch and squeeze space and time.
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One and a half billion years ago, two black holes that
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were 30 to 40 times the size of the sun collided and they bent
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spacetime around themselves.
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This created waves that propagated,
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traveled through the universe at the speed of light.
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And on September 14, 2015, they've reached Earth
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and we were ready to catch them.
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We were able to do so thanks to a facility
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called LIGO, the Laser Interferometer
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Gravitational-Wave Observatory.
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In Louisiana and in Washington state
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there are two almost identical L-shaped detectors
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that use lasers to measure the change in distance
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between mirrors that are two and a half miles apart.
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We're talking about changes in distance that are one
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and 10,000th the size of a proton because that's how small
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the effects of gravitational wave is on Earth.
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When gravitational waves hits LIGO
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they stretched and squeezed its arms.
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And by doing so, they conveyed the message of something that
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happened 1.5 billion years ago.
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Within three minutes, we were alerted of this signal
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and it was perfect, just as theory predicted it would be.
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Within fractions of a second, the frequency and the amplitude
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of the vibration increased with the unmistakable chirp pattern
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that is expected for colliding black holes.
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This is a groundbreaking discovery
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that will open a new field of gravitational wave astronomy
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where gravitational waves will be a new probe to explore
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the mysteries of the universe.
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