Hi

Indeed the time nuts world does intersect very directly with this problem. One 
of the major drivers for some of the JPL work done back in the 1980’s was to 
come up with stable enough sources to mount on a deep space probe. The intent 
was to detect gravity waves. There is always a gotcha, in this case, the lower 
the amplitude of the waved, the harder they are to detect.

Bob

> On Dec 12, 2014, at 3:42 PM, folkert <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> If I understood it well, we should occasionally encounter gravitational
> waves going through, well, the whole galaxy. As time and space are
> intertwined, those ripples may be measured somehow I guess.
> Isn't this that "we as time nuts community" can help the scientific
> world with? E.g. create some kind of grassroots effort where our very
> accurate clocks can detect this? I can imagine all kinds of reasons
> that existing infra for this may not always be able to detect this on
> its own.
> What do you think?
> 
> 
> Folkert van Heusden
> 
> -- 
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