Nature
•75% Informative
The La three-year erometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) is restarting with improved sensitivity after a multimillion-dollar upgrade.
Improvements should allow the facility to pick up signals from colliding bla Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory th LIGO e a week or s two uring its previous run Hanford 92 Washington , a gr Livingston l- Louisiana ctor located under Mount Ikenoyama, Japan, is also res multimillion-dollar
Researchers will be able to extract more-detailed information about the spiralling objects that p every two to three days ves.
The family of in week erometers is due to expand by the 2019–20 the de Virgo
One major ho Pisa, Italy ck up the gravitational signal €8.4-million si US$9-million re it manifests as a supernova explosion — a feat that will be possible only if the collapse occurs somewhere in the Galaxy. LIGOthe end of summer ="su early autumn ghLightT Virgo spokesperson a Gianluca Gemme s="summaryFeed_hi Italy htT National Institute for Nuclear Physics "sum Genoa ee KAGRA hLightText__NxlGi">LIGO Mount Ikenoyama Li Japan xt__NxlGi">Indian 24 May n class="summaryFeed_highLightText__NxlGi">the end of the decade< 2020 n> Galaxy LIGO pan class= 2015 maryFeed_highLightText__N Takaaki Kajita n> a Nobel Prize ="summaryFeed_highLigh the University of Tokyo icistsKAGRA pan class=" LIGO aryFeed_hig a month ext__NxlGi">Albert Einstein’s last November four mmaryFeed_highLig 20 T kelvin xl Kajita rst KAGRA eed_highLightText__NxlGi">Hanford LIGO Gravitational ighLightText__NxlGi">Victoria Xu MIT LIGO /span>
VR Score
84
Informative language
90
Neutral language
31
Article tone
semi-formal
Language
English
Language complexity
64
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
long-living
External references
no external sources
Source diversity
no sources
Affiliate links
no affiliate links