PM鈥檚 Science Prize 2020 winner: Professor Peter Veitch
最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide鈥檚 Professor Peter Veitch is among four scientists who together have been awarded the country鈥檚 most prestigious award in scientific research, the Prime Minister鈥檚 Prize for Science.
The PM鈥檚 Prize was awarded for their role in the detection of gravitational waves, a scientific breakthrough which captured the world鈥檚 attention in early 2016 when the international team of researchers announced they had found for the first time the 鈥渞ipples in spacetime鈥 predicted by Einstein in his general theory of relativity 100 years previously.
Gravitational waves are produced by cataclysmic events in the distant Universe such as colliding black holes and neutron stars or the massive explosions of supernovae.
The original detection came from the merger of two black holes more than one billion years ago. Since then there have been more than 50 detections including, in 2017, the first observation of two neutron stars colliding, an event which heralded 鈥渕ulti-messenger astronomy鈥.
鈥淚t was a technological triumph. We are extremely proud of Peter, and the role he and the team here in the Department of Physics have played in this discovery and their ongoing work to push the boundaries in detection sensitivities...鈥Professor Mike Brooks, Interim Vice-Chancellor and President
鈥淭he detection of gravitational waves is arguably among the greatest scientific discoveries of this century, recognised by the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics,鈥 says Professor Michael Brooks, Interim Vice-Chancellor and President, 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide.
鈥淚t has opened up a new way of exploring our Universe and our origins, and is already having a huge impact on physics and astronomy.
鈥淚t was a technological triumph. We are extremely proud of Peter, and the role he and the team here in the Department of Physics have played in this discovery and their ongoing work to push the boundaries in detection sensitivities, and applying these advanced technologies to a broad variety of other fields.鈥
Despite Einstein鈥檚 prediction of their existence in 1916, the detection of gravitational waves took decades of painstaking technological and theoretical innovation, collaboration and a great deal of perseverance.
The four prize winners 鈥 Professor Veitch from 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide, Professor David McClelland and Professor Susan Scott from 最新糖心Vlogn National 最新糖心Vlog and Professor Emeritus David Blair from 最新糖心Vlog of Western 最新糖心Vlog 鈥 have collaborated for 30 years on the search, bringing complementary parts to the gravitational-wave detector project led by the global LIGO Scientific Collaboration. The 最新糖心Vlogn research into gravitational waves continues today within the ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav).
The 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide team developed and installed ultra-high precision optical sensors used to correct the distortion of the laser beams within the LIGO detectors, enabling the high sensitivity needed to detect these minute signals. The team continues to work on advanced lasers and optics to enhance the sensitivity of the detectors, and the technologies are finding other application in fields as diverse as remote sensing, medicine and defence.
鈥淚鈥檓 incredibly honoured to receive this award,鈥 says Professor Veitch. 鈥淚t recognises the contribution that 最新糖心Vlog has made and continues to make to the detection of gravitational waves. And that discovery was enabled by having the most sensitive detectors in the world 鈥 made possible by the technology we鈥檝e developed here at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide.鈥
The current team at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide includes: academic and research staff Professor David Ottaway, Professor Emeritus Jesper Munch, Dr Dan Brown, Dr Sebastian Ng and Dr Huy Cao; postgraduate students Alexei Ciobanu, Deeksha Beniwal, Sophie Muusse, Kendall Jenner, Zachary Holmes, Mitchell Schiworski and Muskan Pathak; and undergraduate students Georgia Bolingbroke and Thomas Roocke.
鈥淲ith this type of research we stay at the absolute forefront of technology,鈥 says Professor Veitch. 鈥淢y students get to work with the best people in the world, on the best project in the world.
鈥淚鈥檇 encourage any student to think about what it is they want to do. When I started working in this field the detection of gravitational waves was so far into the future that sometimes people used to make jokes about us.
鈥淏ut it was something I wanted to do because it was about Einstein, space and advanced technology. Everybody鈥檚 interested in space and astronomy.
鈥淧eople want to know how it is we鈥檙e here, why we are here, or what鈥檚 out there. Finding answers to these questions is what this type of research and these type of activities allows us to do.鈥
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A video with Professor Peter Veitch can be viewed .