How Gravitational Waves may be hiding Secrets of The Big Bang

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Chapters:
0:00 - Why there is an "Information barrier"
3:04 - Ocean wave analogy
4:46 - Gravitational waves are cosmic Tsumanis
5:45 - How are gravitational waves detected?
8:37 - What caused the gravitational wave background?
10:19 - What would the gravitational background reveal?
10:54 - Future gravitational detectors

Summary:
The information that we know about the universe comes almost exclusively from the analysis of electromagnetic radiation. But there is only so much this light can reveal because there is an inherent barrier. The oldest light that we can detect comes 380,000 years after the Big Bang - Cosmic Microwave background, or CMB. We don’t have access to information about the universe any earlier than 380,000 years after the big bang.

But light is not the only thing that can carry information. According to the latest cosmology models, there should be a gravitational wave background. This background would have occurred within the first second of the big bang so it would give us information that is almost as old as the big bang. It could reveal the secrets of creation.

If you were in a house near the beach and the sea was calm, you could conclude that the wind must be gentle. If you saw the waves becoming bigger, you could conclude that somewhere the wind must have picked up, because a storm far away can form strong waves which can travel very far. So, the reason for the high waves could be a storm far away, or there could be some strong wind nearby.

This is analogous to how it is with gravitational waves. We cannot feel the reason for the gravitational waves, but knowing the principles of physics, we can get a good idea of what may have caused the waves.

If there was an earthquake at sea, some time later, a tsunami would hit the shore. In this case the wave tells us something very concrete. A huge and localized wave tells us that something catastrophic like an earthquake probably caused the tsunami.

If we carefully traced how the wave hit the shore in different places, then we could also get a good idea where the earthquake happened, just by considering the tsunami wave.

This is similar to what we currently do with gravitational waves. We are detecting the equivalent of tsunamis. These events could be the collision of two black holes for example, or two neutron stars forming a black hole.
Our current technology only allows us to detect these very strong – tsunami-equivalent signals. We can’t currently detect low intensity gravitational waves.

Any accelerating mass will create gravitational waves because mass affects spacetime. Even a moving car will create too much background gravitational wave noise for us to detect very faint gravitational signals. So only very strong waves can be detected. A faint signal equivalent to the calm ocean waves.

We use a laser interferometer to detect gravitational waves. You take a laser, then you shoot it through a beam splitter that splits the laser beam into two equal half beams. Then you send each of these beams away from each other at a 90-degree angle. After having them travel the same length, a mirror reflects the beam back through the beam splitter. This unites the two half beams, and sends them into a photodetector which measures any phase shift. A Gravitational wave stretches and contracts space time, so, the two half beams will get stretched or contracted. So when the beams reunite at the detector, they will be slightly out of phase.

Gravitational waves are believed to have been formed within the first second of the Big Bang. How? One way they would have formed is when the combined electroweak force broke apart into the two separate forces we see today - the electromagnetic force and weak force. This would have happened within fractions of a second after the big bang.
#gravitywaves
#bigbang
It’s when the Higgs field transitioned into a non-zero minimum and became massive. This caused the fundamental particles to gain mass through their interaction with the Higgs potential. This change from massless to massive fundamental particles could cause gravitational waves.

These waves also could have formed during the process of cosmic inflation when the universe expanded exponentially during the first fractions of a second of after the Big Bang, from an infinitesimally small point to about the size of a large orange.

So detecting the gravitational waves from this era would give us insights about the early universe that we could never hope to obtain from the CMB. It’s not certain what we would see, but we could expect to see clues leading to new physics.
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Besides how exciting this would be if we could detect gravitational waves from earlier than the CMB, I just wanna say thank you for making these videos. You're prob my fav channel for this stuff. Cheers!

das_it_mane
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Arvin Ash, simply thank you for taking the time to make those great videos and educate people who are not specialist in this field! Thanks a million and greetings from Belgium.

StefBelgium
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I spent my career as an government imagery intelligence analyst looking at our own planet with a variety of sensors across the spectrum. I love hearing about how similar tech is turned away from the earth and used to observe the universe. It’s fascinating. Thanks for your content.

chrismason
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oh man, your videos really give more reasons to be alive at the moment when these types of discoveries are made. Love it :)

gamingtalent
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I REALLY want to pursue a career in theoretical physics
I would love to research
Preparing for IISER
But don't know if I will be able to crack
YOUR VDOS HAVE HELPED ME A LOT
THANK YOU SO MUCH

_judge_me_not
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Good to see you here again Arvin. Great video, excellent graphics and presentation (as usual).

gettothepoint_already
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This is literally better than anything on TV

magnushorus
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One word. Outstanding explanation of gravitational astronomy

nagbalkur
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0:16 that's the Sombrero galaxy, definitely NOT the Magellanic clouds

vytautasdanielius
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Thank you, Arvin, and glad to see your head has healed up!

nielsbohr
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Thank you again .The pictures were good.

petergreen
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I don't know which people dislike this videos. The amount of effort given in this videos is tremendous which is clearly appearing in this videos.

bidish
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These videos are very information dense! Thanks for giving such educational content and generating interest about science among people.

blindmoonbeaver
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Arvin, the background noise is the vibration caused by passing by cars, trucks or earthquakes, not by their puny gravitational effect on the equipment.

parkershaw
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I'm really impressed with ur content. Good job Arvin, keep sharing interesting science facts about our universe, I'll never miss any of'em❤

tejasraysad
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You have a picture of Sombrero Galaxy described as the LMC and SMC. Your videos are fantastic and very educational. Keep 'em coming bud!

curtislee
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I really love the videos you make. I learned so much about my favorite topics. This video will be awesome too. Thank you Arvin, you're like the teacher I always wished for.

Greetings from Germany!

lunariclunestra
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Amazing, amazing video!!! Well done as always

impromptu
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Do "Cosmic neutrino background". BTW, great channel.

tzavrski
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This was a beautiful video, Professor Ashe, of a complicated subject. Very illucidating. Thank you. I often try to imagine the gravitational field created by my own body and how it effects the objects around me and their gravitational fields. How and why the Higgs field has mass and how particles get their mass from it is a mystery to me, though.

iggyzorro