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Understanding Gravitational Waves [E-Book] / by C. R. Kitchin.

The birth of a completely new branch of observational astronomy is a rare and exciting occurrence. For a long time, our theories about gravitational waves-proposed by Albert Einstein and others more than a hundred years ago-could never be fully proven, since we lacked the proper technology to do it....

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Personal Name(s): Kitchin, C. R., author
Edition: 1st edition 2021.
Imprint: Cham : Springer, 2021
Physical Description: XIV, 413 pages (online resource)
Note: englisch
ISBN: 9783030742072
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-74207-2
Series Title: Astronomers' Universe
Subject (LOC):
Gravitation.
Physics.
Quantum field theory.
String theory.
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The birth of a completely new branch of observational astronomy is a rare and exciting occurrence. For a long time, our theories about gravitational waves-proposed by Albert Einstein and others more than a hundred years ago-could never be fully proven, since we lacked the proper technology to do it. That all changed when, on September 14, 2015, instruments at the LIGO Observatory detected gravitational waves for the first time. This book explores the nature of gravitational waves-what they are, where they come from, why they are so significant and why nobody could prove they existed before now. Written in plain language and interspersed with additional explanatory tutorials, it will appeal to lay readers, science enthusiasts, physical science students, amateur astronomers and to professional scientists and astronomers.

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