Time Experiment
Antony Phillips
Einstein
was right again. There is a space-time vortex around Earth, and its
shape precisely matches the predictions of Einstein's theory of gravity.
Researchers confirmed these points at a press conference today at
NASA headquarters where they announced the long-awaited results of
Gravity Probe B (GP-B). "The space-time around Earth appears
to be distorted just as general relativity predicts," says Stanford
University physicist Francis Everitt, principal investigator of the
Gravity Probe B mission.
"This is an epic result," adds Clifford Will of Washington
University in St. Louis. An expert in Einstein's theories, Will chairs
an independent panel of the National Research Council set up by NASA
in 1998 to monitor and review the results of Gravity Probe B. "One
day," he predicts, "this will be written up in textbooks
as one of the classic experiments in the history of physics."
Time and space, according to Einstein's theories of relativity, are
woven together, forming a four-dimensional fabric called "space-time."
The mass of Earth dimples this fabric, much like a heavy person sitting
in the middle of a trampoline. Gravity, says Einstein, is simply the
motion of objects following the curvaceous lines of the dimple.
If Earth were stationary, that would be the end of the story. But
Earth is not stationary. Our planet spins, and the spin should twist
the dimple, slightly, pulling it around into a 4-dimensional swirl.
This is what GP-B went to space in 2004 to check.
The idea behind the experiment is simple:
Put a spinning gyroscope into orbit around the Earth, with the spin
axis pointed toward some distant star as a fixed reference point.
Free from external forces, the gyroscope's axis should continue pointing
at the star--forever. But if space is twisted, the direction of the
gyroscope's axis should drift over time. By noting this change in
direction relative to the star, the twists of space-time could be
measured. In practice, the experiment is tremendously difficult. The
four gyroscopes in GP-B are the most perfect spheres ever made by
humans. These ping pong-sized balls of fused quartz and silicon are
1.5 inches across and never vary from a perfect sphere by more than
40 atomic layers. If the gyroscopes weren't so spherical, their spin
axes would wobble even without the effects of relativity.
According to calculations, the twisted space-time around Earth should
cause the axes of the gyros to drift merely 0.041 arcseconds over
a year. An arcsecond is 1/3600th of a degree. To measure this angle
reasonably well, GP-B needed a fantastic precision of 0.0005 arcseconds.
It's like measuring the thickness of a sheet of paper held edge-on
100 miles away. "GP-B researchers had to invent whole new technologies
to make this possible," notes Will. They developed a "drag
free" satellite that could brush against the outer layers of
Earth's atmosphere without disturbing the gyros. They figured out
how to keep Earth's magnetic field from penetrating the spacecraft.
And they created a device to measure the spin of a gyro--without touching
the gyro.
Pulling off the experiment was an exceptional challenge. But after
a year of data-taking and nearly five years of analysis, the GP-B
scientists appear to have done it. "We measured a geodetic precession
of 6.600 plus or minus 0.017 arcseconds and a frame dragging effect
of 0.039 plus or minus 0.007 arcseconds," says Everitt. For readers
who are not experts in relativity: Geodetic precession is the amount
of wobble caused by the static mass of the Earth (the dimple in spacetime)
and the frame dragging effect is the amount of wobble caused by the
spin of the Earth (the twist in spacetime). Both values are in precise
accord with Einstein's predictions.
"In the opinion of the committee that I chair, this effort was
truly heroic. We were just blown away," says Will. An artist's
concept of twisted spacetime around a black hole. Credit: Joe Bergeron
of Sky & Telescope magazine. The results of Gravity Probe B give
physicists renewed confidence that the strange predictions of Einstein's
theory are indeed correct, and that these predictions may be applied
elsewhere. The type of spacetime vortex that exists around Earth is
duplicated and magnified elsewhere in the cosmos--around massive neutron
stars, black holes, and active galactic nuclei.
"If you tried to spin a gyroscope in the severely twisted space-time
around a black hole," says Will, "it wouldn't just gently
precess by a fraction of a degree. It would wobble crazily and possibly
even flip over."
In binary black hole systems--that is, where one black hole orbits
another black hole--the black holes themselves are spinning and thus
behave like gyroscopes. Imagine a system of orbiting, spinning, wobbling,
flipping black holes! That's the sort of thing general relativity
predicts and which GP-B tells us can really be true.
The scientific legacy of GP-B isn't limited to general relativity.
The project also touched the lives of hundreds of young scientists:
"Because it was based at a university many students were able
to work on the project," says Everitt. "More than 86 PhD
theses at Stanford plus 14 more at other Universities were granted
to students working on GP-B. Several hundred undergraduates and 55
high-school students also participated, including astronaut Sally
Ride and eventual Nobel Laureate Eric Cornell."
NASA funding for Gravity Probe B began in the fall of 1963. That means
Everitt and some colleagues have been planning, promoting, building,
operating, and analyzing data from the experiment for more than 47
years—truly, an epic effort.
What's next?
Everitt recalls some advice given to him by his thesis advisor and
Nobel Laureate Patrick M.S. Blackett: "If you can't think of
what physics to do next, invent some new technology, and it will lead
to new physics."
"Well," says Everitt, "we invented 13 new technologies
for Gravity Probe B. Who knows where they will take us?"
This epic might just be getting started, after all….