Well said, Dan. Indeed, the excellent contribution from the upgraded GMRT by the Indian Pulsar Timing Array (InPTA) team to this global effort has been due to a large extent to the Casper based digital receiver systems that we use!

With best wishes,

Yashwant.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Prof. Yashwant Gupta
Distinguished Professor and Centre Director
National Centre for Radio Astrophysics
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Pune University Campus, Pune 411 007, India.
Phone: +91-20-25719242/25691620 (Pune); +91-2132-252119/258316 (GMRT)
Email: [email protected] ; [email protected]
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++



On Thu, 29 Jun 2023, Dan Werthimer wrote:



dear casper collaboration, 

you might have read about the discovery of the stochastic background of 
gravitational
waves. 
"the cosmic hum of gravitational waves". 
i'm appending some media coverage from yesterday and today, from science and the
washington post. 

there's a live video public announcement from nanograv today at 13:00 eastern, 
10:00am
pacific time at this link:    
https://nanograv.org/news/15yrDataSet

the discovery is a huge international collaboration of different pulsar timing
groups. 
almost all (perhaps all) of the measurements from this discovery were done with 
casper
based instruments, 
using hardware, software, tools, libraries that many of you developed. 
so congratulations !

best wishes and congrats on your amazing work, 

dan
 


IN MAJOR DISCOVERY, SCIENTISTS SAY GRAVITATIONAL WAVES CONSTANTLY CHURN SPACE
AND TIME — SEEMINGLY AFFIRMING AN EINSTEIN THEORY

Multiple international teams of scientists have independently found compelling
evidence for long-theorized space-time waves called the “gravitational wave
background.” The announcement has sent a thrill through the astrophysics 
community,
which has been buzzing for days in anticipation of papers that seem to affirm an
astounding implication of Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity.

Read more
 

ASTROPHYSICS  |  NEWS FROM SCIENCE
A cosmic hum of gravitational waves has finally been detected
Scientists have long hypothesized that the fabric of spacetime is filled with
ripples—long gravitational waves produced by colliding supermassive black 
holes. But
these undulations are hard to detect, as there’s just so much background noise
complicating their detection. Now, after 20 years of hunting, the hum of these
overlapping gravitational waves has finally been heard, according to reports 
released
last night involving five separate international teams.

The feat was achieved by tuning into rapidly rotating pulsars. These now-dead 
stars
emit radiation as they spin, blasting Earth at precise intervals. Because
gravitational waves stretch and squish spacetime, they alter the timing of these
pulsar flashes—and it’s these miniscule shifts in timing that the North American
Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) and four other pulsar 
timing
arrays around the world have finally detected.

“This is really epic,” says University of Amsterdam astrophysicist Jason 
Hessels, who
used to work with one of the teams involved in the announcement. According to 
experts,
it opens up all sorts of astronomical research and could even reveal new 
physics.
“We’re not even close to the end of the story,” Hessels says.

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