Nobel Prize for Physics, 2017 – Indian Connection
The 2017 Nobel Prize
for Physics has been conferred to three scientists namely Rainer Weiss, Barry C
Barish & Kip S Thorne under the LIGO Project for their discovery of
gravitational waves, 100 years after Einstein's General Relativity predicted
it. The Nobel Prize for Physics 2017 celebrates the direct detection of
Gravitational waves arriving from the merger two large Black holes in a distant
galaxy a Billion of light years away. Gravitational waves carry information
about their dramatic origins and about the nature of gravity that cannot
otherwise be obtained. This opens a new window to Astronomy since Gravitational
Waves are an entirely new way of observing the most violent events in space.
This is a proud
moment for India also, since the discovery
paper has 39 Indian authors/scientists from nine institutions-, CMI
Chennai, ICTS-TIFR Bengaluru, IISER-Kolkata, IISER-Trivandrum, IIT Gandhinagar,
IPR Gandhinagar, IUCAA Pune, RRCAT Indore and TIFR Mumbai. primarily funded
through individual/ institutional grants by Department of Atomic Energy,
Department of Science & Technology and Ministry of Human Resource
Development AE, DST and MHRD, who are co-authors of this discovery paper. Late
Professor CV Vishveshvara of RRI, Bengaluru (DST AI) and Professor SV
Dhurandhar of IUCAA, Pune and some other Indian scientists made seminal
contributions to this field which contributed towards the principles behind the
LIGO Detector.
The group led by Bala
Iyer (currently at ICTS-TIFR) at the Raman Research Institute in collaboration
with scientists in France had pioneered the mathematical calculations used to
model Gravitational Wave signals from orbiting black holes and neutron stars.
Theoretical work that combined black holes and gravitational waves was
published by C. V. Vishveshwara in 1970. These contributions are prominently
cited in the discovery paper.
An opportunity for
India taking leadership in this field has opened up with the LIGO-India
mega-science project that was granted ‘in principle’ approval by the Union
Cabinet on Feb 17 2016. LIGO-India brings forth a real possibility of Indian
scientists and technologists stepping forward, with strong international
cooperation, into the frontier of an emergent area of high visibility and
promise presented by the recent GW detections and the high promise of a new
window of gravitational-wave astronomy to probe the universe.
The global science
community is unanimous that the future of Gravitational wave astronomy and
astrophysics, beyond the first discovery, lies with the planned global array of
GW detectors, including the LIGO-India observatory. Inclusion of LIGO-India
greatly improves the angular resolution in the location of the
gravitational-wave source by the LIGO global network. For the discovery event
observed by the two advanced LIGO detectors in the US, with a hypothetical
LIGO-India in operation, there would have been 100 times improvement in the
angular resolution.
The LIGO-India
proposal is for the construction and operation of an Advanced LIGO Detector in
India in collaboration with the LIGO Laboratories, USA. The objective is to set
up the Indian node of the three node global Advanced LIGO detector network by
2024 and operate it for 10 years. The task for LIGO-India includes the
challenge of constructing the very large vaccum infrastructure that would hold
a space of volume 10 million litres that can accommodate the entire 4 km scale
laser interferometer in ultra high vacuum environment at nano-torrs. Indian
team is also responsible for installation and commissioning the complex
instrument and attaining the ultimate design sensitivity.
The LIGO-India
project is being jointly executed by lead institutions: the Inter-University
Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA), Pune of the University Grants
commission, and DAE organisations, Institute for Plasma Research (IPR),
Gandhinagar, the Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology (RRCAT), Indore
and the Directorate of Construction & Estate Management (DCSEM) of DAE.
LIGO-India is being
jointly funded by the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and the Department of
Science and Technology (DST). A LIGO-India Apex committee, together with the
LIGO-India Project Management Board (LI-PMB) and LIGO-India Scientific
Management Board (LI-SMB), were constituted in August 2016 to oversee the
project execution, and there has been rapid pace of progress since then.
LIGO-India is on track for commencing operations by 2024
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