Welcome Rabadash to Team FreeBSD. You are among friends. Keep em blazed!
Science 2.0 has a nicely written article about EINSTEIN@HOME; its technologies used for gravitational wave detection and an in-depth view into the complexities and potential of our project. The article is entitled "Citizen Scientists Discover New Pulsar With Einstein@Home"
"..These waves of space-time, however, have never yet been directly observed. So, the phenomena, although it might seem reasonable, remains only a hypothesis. This is where the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory, or LIGO, comes into play. ..."
The full article is available from Science 2.0 at [this URL].
Welcome arfab to Team FreeBSD. You are among friends. Keep em blazed!
Arecibo binary pulsar (re)discoveries page updated
The latest radio pulsar (re)discoveries are available at the usual place. Our count is now at 2 observations of 1 NEW pulsar, 242 detections of 123 different known radio pulsars, including 20 re-observations of 8 different milli-second pulsars. Thank you very much volunteers! 27 Aug 2010 13:40:17 UTC - [source]
Welcome to our team Michael Belle, Nick Schmalenberger, Dr_ZaITo, seti@km.ua, unknwnlgnd, lordnor1981, bG909, dworkin, aubie88, heilkitty!
I apologize if I missed anyone. Welcome - you are all among friends. Keep your boxes blazed!
We are delighted to announce that Einstein@Home has made its first discovery: a radio pulsar, found in data from the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico. Details are available in a paper published online today by Science. If you don't have access to Science, the manuscript is also in the arXiv preprint archive (use the PDF link in the top right corner). A press-conference webcast about this first discovery is also available. The name of the pulsar is PSR J2007+2722. It is a 40.8 Hz isolated pulsar, 17,000 light years distant in the plane of the Galaxy, and is most likely a Disrupted Recycled Pulsar (DRP). If so, it is the fastest DRP yet discovered. The Einstein@Home volunteers whose computers found the pulsar with the highest significance are Chris and Helen Colvin, from Ames Iowa and Daniel Gebhardt, Musikinformatik, Universitaet Mainz. Additional information about the discovery is available on our web pages. We thank ALL Einstein@Home volunteers for their support, and look forward eagerly to our next discovery. Bruce Allen, Director, Einstein@Home August 12, 2010 - [Bruce Allen]
The NSF (National Science Foundation) has released a video announcement (press release 10-140) of this finding entitled "First genuine astronomical discovery made by German and American Einstein@Home volunteers.". This video is available [here].
Source [Forum Thread] [NSF]
My name is Andy Wright - the founder, but really the creator of Team FreeBSD. If you want me to add any links, or have any questions or inclinations for such things related to our group (or to just say hi) - send me an e-mail: einstein@extracted.org or Skype name: extracted
''It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure'' -- Albert Einstein