INTER-UNIVERSITY  CENTRE  FOR  ASTRONOMY  AND  ASTROPHYSICS
(An Autonomous Institution of the University Grants Commission)

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  COLLOQUIUM

 

PROFESSOR PATRICK BRADY

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
 
A spectacular collision: Observations of a binary neutron star merger
 
 

On August 17, 2017, the gravitational-wave signal from a pair of merging neutron stars was detected by the LIGO-Virgo network. A gamma-ray burst, ~2 seconds after the merger, was detected by the Fermi satellite. The source of the signal was localized to about 30 square degrees on the sky using the gravitational-wave data. An optical transient was later identified in NGC 4993, just 130 million light years from Earth. Follow-up observations across the electromagnetic spectrum revealed a mildly-relativistic explosion including a component powered by the radioactive decay of r-process nuclei. After a brief review of the LIGO-Virgo detectors and the gravitational waves predicted by general relativity, the speaker will describe the rich scientific payoff from this discovery.

 
IUCAA Lecture Hall, Bhaskara 3
February 15, 2018, 16:00 hrs.