Listen to the Universe as Here Be Dragons Launches the Next Instalment of The Possible

Last month Here be Dragons launched the first episode in a five-part series called The Possible. Called Hello, Robotit took viewers inside the secure testing facility of Boston Dynamics a robotics specialist. Now the production company has released its second instalment Listening to the Universeheading to the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) to see how scientists are measuring gravitational waves.

Gravitational waves are tiny ripples in space time – which Einstein predicted – but were previously thought to be too small to detect here on Earth. But with LIGO that has now been shown to be possible, enabling scientists to peer into the darkest regions of space.

The Possible - ligo_5-Listening to the Universe

“More recently, an MIT physics professor did the math and concluded that Einstein was wrong,” states the video’s description. “So he built the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), which measures almost infinitesimally small disturbances in spacetime—smaller than anything that’s been measured before. And in 2016, LIGO succeeded, detecting gravitational waves from a massive, faraway collision between black holes.”

For those interested in astronomy LIGO provides a new way to observe the universe and Here Be Dragons meets with some of the researchers pioneering the technology. Explaining how minute these waves are, Nergis Mavalvala, professor of astrophysics, MIT, explains: “Gravitational waves are incredibly hard to detect, you can think of them as ripples stretching and shrinking space as they travel through the universe. They travel at the speed of light and they pass undisturbed through every object that they meet. But by the time the gravitational wave gets to us hear on the Earth its effect is miniscule. A thousand times smaller than a nucleus of an atom, and the nucleus of an atom is ten thousand times smaller than the atom itself, and an atom is a thousand times smaller than what we can see with a microscope.

The video is available through the Within app for iOS, Android using Google Cardboard, or HTC Vive, Oculus Rift, Samsung Gear VR, and PlayStation VR head-mounted displays (HMDs).

For an update on the next instalment of The Possible, keep reading VRFocus.

The Possible’s Second Episode on Within Tackles Something Einstein Got Wrong

The Possible’s Second Episode on Within Tackles Something Einstein Got Wrong

Virtual reality continues to be an incredible platform for creators to innovate when telling stories and there are plenty of groups taking advantage of this, large and small. Hulu has taken to the medium for news and comedy shows along with the Life brand’s shift into documentary-like VR content, but Within is an entity that was named entirely with VR storytelling in mind.

Continuing its trend of producing high-quality immersive content, Within unveiled a new episode of their science and engineering documentary series called The Possible.

Founded by filmmaker Chris Milk, Within collaborates with companies like Apple, NBC, Vice, and many more to create experiences across a collection of genres. The Possible, made with financial backing from GE, will place viewers face to face with cutting edge technology and discoveries across the life of the serial series. Its second episode is named Listening to the Universe and tackles something that Einstein actually got wrong:

A century ago, Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves—ripples in spacetime—but believed they were so small that humans would never observe them.

More recently, an MIT physics professor did the math and concluded that Einstein was wrong. So he built the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), which measures almost infinitesimally small disturbances in spacetime—smaller than anything that’s been measured before. And in 2016, LIGO succeeded, detecting gravitational waves from a massive, faraway collision between black holes.

Pakistani-American astrophysicist Nergis Mavalvala PhD is the MIT physics professor mentioned in the episode’s summary and she’s also known for her pioneering experiments on laser cooling of macroscopic objects and in the generation of squeezed quantum states of light.

If this new episode is any testament to the future stories, The Possible is going to be a very deep dive into science and tech and include collaborations with some of the greatest minds in the world. Listening to the Universe is available in the Within app for iOS, Android, Steam VR, Oculus Home, and PS VR and it’s available to watch on their website as well.

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