Scientists
win $3mll for detecting Einstein's waves
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[May 03, 2016]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Researchers who
helped detect gravitational waves for the first time, confirming part of
Albert Einstein's theory in a landmark moment in scientific history,
will share a $3 million Special Breakthrough Prize, according to the
prize's selection committee.
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The Breakthrough Prizes for scientific achievements were created
by Russian billionaire Yuri Milner along with several technology
pioneers, including Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and Google
co-founder Sergey Brin.
In February, a team from the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave
Observatory (LIGO) announced a pair of giant laser detectors had
measured the tiny ripples in space and time first theorized by
Einstein a century ago, capping a decades-long quest.
Einstein predicted gravitational waves as part of his seminal theory
of general relativity, which explained gravity as distortions in
both space and time caused by bodies of matter.
LIGO's three founders - Rainer Weiss, Kip Thorne and Ronald Drever,
who dedicated much of their careers to gravitational wave detection
- will share $1 million. More than 1,000 contributors to the project
will also split $2 million equally.
"That's much more modern and much more the way that physics gets
done," said Weiss, a professor emeritus at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, of the decision to honor the entire team.
"You can't credit just the three of us for this."
Researchers said the gravitational waves came from the collision of
two black holes, the extraordinarily dense objects that Einstein's
theory also predicted. The black holes, both many times the mass of
the sun, were located 1.3 billion light years from Earth.
The waves should unlock new ways to understand the cosmos, including
black holes, neutron stars and the mysteries of the early universe.
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"For us to spend basically a half-century since the three of us
started working in this field, to have it actually be pulled off
successfully in the manner we dreamed – it was really remarkable and
wonderful," said Thorne, who is retired from the California
Institute of Technology. "I'm forever grateful to the team that got
it done."
The winners will be honored at a December ceremony, when the regular
annual awards for physics, life sciences and mathematics will also
be announced. The Special Breakthrough Prize can be conferred at any
time to mark "an extraordinary scientific achievement."
Edward Witten, a prominent physicist who heads the physics prize
selection committee, said the discovery's magnitude warranted
immediate recognition.
"There are a lot of basic things about Einstein's theory of
relativity that seemed like science fiction when I was a student,"
Witten said. "This is the first time we've seen the full force of
Einstein's theory of gravity at work."
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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