What an exciting time! Back in issue 8, we caught up with all the hopes and nerves as the #LISAPathfinder team prepared for launch!
ligo.org/wp-content/u... (pdf, page 62)
#LISAMission #LPF10anniversary
What an exciting time! Back in issue 8, we caught up with all the hopes and nerves as the #LISAPathfinder team prepared for launch!
ligo.org/wp-content/u... (pdf, page 62)
#LISAMission #LPF10anniversary
Lovely to look back at old editions - issue 8 not only celebrated the launch of #LISAPathfinder π, it was also our special first detection edition! #GW150914 π
www.ligo.org/magazine
#LISAMission #LPF10anniversary @lisacommunity.bsky.social
Happy 10 Year anniversary to LISA Pathfinder! ππ
And lots to look forward to for the #LISAMission!
#LPF10anniversary @lisacommunity.bsky.social
It's been 10 years since our dear LISA Pathfinder (LPF) launched! For the ones who don't know much about it, here's a quick refresher about your favorite mission's precursor π°οΈπ
#LPF10anniversary #LISAMission
Artistβs impression of LISA Pathfinder in space. The Earth is visible in the background, partly lit.
Happy 10th launch anniversary, LISA Pathfinder! π₯³
For the first time ever, this mission tested in space the technology needed to detect gravitational waves, which paved the way to LISA π€ π€
Planned to launch in 2035, LISA will be first gravitational wave detector in space π esa.int/lisa
π
A screenshot of LIGO Magazine article "From noise hunting to Olympiads" by Catalina Miritescu. The page shows the article title and a photo of the author. The image shows a plot produced by students as part of their Olympiad challenge. Image credit: Catalina Miritescu.
In the latest edition of the #LIGOMagazine, Catalina Miritescu told us all about bringing #GravitationalWave noise hunting with @ligo.org-@egovirgo.bsky.social-KAGRA to the Romanian National Astronomy and Astrophysics Olympiad!
Read all about it at (pdf, page 38): ligo.org/wp-content/u...
Infographic about GW241011 and GW241110 GW241011's source contained black holes about 13 and 8 times the mass of our Sun. The spin of the bigger black hole is high and bear aligned with the orbit. GW241110's source contained black holes about 17 and 8 times the mass of our Sun. The spin of the larger black hole is high and near anti-aligned with the orbit. Credit: Shanika Galaudage/Northwestern University/Adler Planetarium
We are pleased to announce our discovery of #GW241011 and #GW241110
Both come from binary black holes where one black hole is much larger than the other. The larger black holes have large spin. Could these black holes have formed in a previous merger?
ligo.org/science-summ...
#O4IsHere ππ§ͺβοΈβοΈ
GWTC-4.0 Introduction & Open Data Webinar 13 November 2025 Webinar live from 15:00 UTC
Our next webinar will introduce our latest #GWTC4 release and the associated data (papers arxiv.org/abs/2508.18080 and arxiv.org/abs/2508.18079)
Tomorrow at 15:00 UTC, with the recording on YouTube after
Free registration wisconsin-edu.zoom.us/webinar/regi...
βοΈπ
14th Sep was celebrated internationally by the international scientific community as the tenth anniversary of the first direct detection of #Gravitationalwaves. LIGO-India EPO joined the global celebration by organising a special event on this day
IUCAA, Pune
This artwork imagines the ultimate front-row seat for GW250114, a powerful collision between two black holes observed in gravitational waves by the US National Science Foundation LIGO. It depicts the view from one of the black holes as it spirals toward its cosmic partner.
Yesterday's Astronomy Picture of the Day #APOD featured #GW250114! This artwork imagines the ultimate front-row seat as two black holes spiral together on their way toward producing the strongest gravitational-wave signal we've detected so far
apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap25092...
π¨A Simonnet ππ
A sheet cake decorated with "Happy 10 Birthday GW150914", confetti, balloons, a binary black hole, and the data from our first detection, as well as the OzGrav logo. It is edged with some creamy frosting.
Last Sunday was the 10th anniversary of our first #GravitationalWave detection!
Join us for a thread of celebratory cakes enjoyed by members of our collaboration
First, a cake from @ozgrav.bsky.social Looks like plenty to share?
πΌοΈ: J Powell
π§΅π #GW10Years
A screenshot from LIGO Magazine article "A path to fossil-free supercomputing". The image shows the title of the article displayed over a photo of the LUMI data centre in Finland. The data centre is in a large building and is artistically lit in shades of blue. Image credit: Fade Creative.
In the latest edition of #LIGOMagazine, Ivan Markin chats with Pekka Manninen from LUMI (@lumi-supercomputer.eu) about paths to fossil free computing & the LUMI experience of using 100% renewables.
Read all about it at (pdf, page 40): ligo.org/wp-content/u...
#ClimateChangeConversations
#GW10Years
"What is LIGO?" poster. The poster features a range of line drawings in blue and white explaining LIGO and its science. In each scene the character explains an aspect of LIGO or gravitational-wave science. The poster includes information including: LIGO has 4km long arms; the location of the LIGO instruments in Hanford and Livingston; the first detection happened in 2015; the other gravitational wave detectors are Virgo in Italy, KAGRA in Japan, GEO600 in Germany.
And the other poster takes a look at @ligo.org @egovirgo.bsky.social KAGRA and their science.
By Gwendolyn Krenkel (Artwork and Concept), Sascha Rieger/ Milde Marketing Science Comms.
Full resolution version at: dcc.ligo.org/G2501956/pub...
#GW10Years
A poster in purples, pinks and blues showing a timeline of gravitational wave science. The timeline starts in the 1910s with the proposal of the existence of gravitational waves and goes up to the present day when we celebrate 10 years of gravitational wave observations as well as looking to future wit new facilities being planned and built. Throughout the timeline, there are illustrations showing black holes, neutron stars, gravitational waves and interferometers.
We are thrilled to feature two posters in the latest #LIGOMagazine!
One poster explores the evolution of #GravitationalWave science.
By Yi Shuen Christine Lee / Carl Knox / @ozgrav.bsky.social
Full resolution version at: dcc.ligo.org/G2501957/pub...
#GW10Years @ligo.org @egovirgo.bsky.social
Friends, did you know that @ligo.org and @ligomagazine.bsky.social were on Bluesky? If you want to keep up to date with the gravitational wave world go follow them!
π§ͺπ
A decade of detecting gravitational waves: The Naked Scientists podcast catch up on the current status of gravitational-wave astronomy and future plans, including an interview with Prof. Gaby Gonzalez
www.thenakedscientists.com/podcasts/nak...
#GW10Years ππ§ͺβοΈ
Louis Dartez receiving his LIGO Calibration Wizard hat at the September 2025 LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA meeting from Jess McIver. The hat is a traditional pointy blue hat, but is covered with images of lasers.
During the recent LIGO @egovirgo.bsky.social KAGRA meeting, the 2024 winner of the LIGO Laboratory Award for Excellence in Detector Characterization and Calibration, Louis Dartez, received his honorary Calibration Wizard hat.
Congratulations to Dr. Dartez!
www.ligo.caltech.edu/page/award-e...
Exciting to get a first look at the #LISA spacecraft!
In the latest #LIGOMagazine, Oliver Jennrich & Nora LΓΌtzgendorf told us all about the selection of the industrial prime contractor.
Read all about it on page 34 (pdf): ligo.org/wp-content/u...
@lisacommunity.bsky.social #GW10Years
A digital drawing with text that says "happy birthday GW150914", a spacetime cake with a 10 and two black holes on it, and the GW150914 waveforms around it all
Happy birthday GW150914!
When you were detected I was still an undergrad looking to get into GWs for her PhD (it's important to my internal story of myself that I wanted to do this *before* the detection)
It's hard to believe how far we've come since then.
π‘π§ͺπ
#GW10Years
Stay tuned for more posts about this bumper edition in the coming days!
Rob Coyne inserting posters into the LIGO Magazine edition. Rob is sat at a table in a conference room with several round tables and chairs behind. A LIGO Magazine is open on the table and a poster has just been added to it. To the side there are more LIGO Magazines in a pile waiting in the production line. Photo credit: Peter Shawhan.
And a big thank you to Rob Coyne (@robcoyne.com) and Peter Shawhan for going above and beyond to help us get this bumper edition over the line - including inserting posters in each & every copy at the @ligo.org-@egovirgo.bsky.social-KAGRA meeting in Colorado last week!
(πΈ Photo by Peter Shawhan)
Front cover of LIGO Magazine issue 27. The headline article text reads: "10 years of Gravitational Wave Astronomy". Two gravitational wave signals are shown in the main image - they are shown as timeseries data which look wiggles. In the top corner, an illustration of a birthday cake is shown - the cake is being distorted as it is sucked into a black hole! Cover: Main image: GW150914 and GW231123 image by LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA/Sascha Rieger. Top inset: GW231123 plot from LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA. Bottom inset: Masses in the stellar graveyard plot by LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA/Aaron Geller/Northwestern. Bottom-left (diagonal): LISA image from OHB. Top-right corner: GW150914 birthday cake artwork by Storm Colloms.
Thank you to all who contributed to this extra long edition, especially our wonderful editorial team for all your hard work and enthusiasm!
Read this and all editions at: ligo.org/magazine/
#GW10Years
A page of LIGO Magazine article "GW231123 - the most massive black hole merger yet!". The page includes the title of the article and an infographic about GW231123 in blues and yellows. The infographic displays information including the mass of the two black holes (which were 137 and 103 times the mass of our sun), the distance that the signal travelled (between 2 billion light years and 13 billion light years) and how long the signal lasted in the LIGO Livingston and LIGO Hanford detectors (0.1 seconds). Image credit: Simona J. Miller / Caltech.
The image shows a page of LIGO Magazine article "GW231123: the most massive black hole merger yet!". The page includes photos of the two authors, Debnandini Mukherjee & Tanmaya Mishra. Both of them are smiling.
#GW231123 - the most massive black hole merger yet! We also caught up with Debnandini Mukherjee and Tanmaya Mishra on what makes this observation interesting plus their experience of working on the discovery paper.
#GW10Years #GWTC4
A page of LIGO Magazine article "GWTC-4.0 Catalog Paper". The page includes an image showing the gravitational wave observations so far which are indicated by circles at different distances from a central point signifying the Earth. Image created by: Derek Davis/Rhiannon Udall/Caltech/LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA The page also includes a photo of one of the authors, Lucy Thomas.
A page of LIGO Magazine article about GWTC-4.0. The page includes a photo of one of the authors, Daniel Williams.
A page of the LIGO Magazine article about GWTC-4.0. The image at the top of the page is called the "masses in the stellar graveyard plot". It summarises the gravitational wave observations of neutron stars and black holes so far. Each object is represented by a circle and they are ordered vertically by mass. The image is full of circles representing many observations. The horizontal arrangement is purely aesthetic and appears like the spread wings of a bird. Image credit: LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA/Aaron Geller/Northwestern. The page also shows a photo of one of the authors, Michael PΓΌrrer.
A page of the LIGO Magazine article about GWTC-4.0. The image at the top of the page shows an older version of the masses in the stellar graveyard plot from 2017. This older version has far fewer observations compared to the current version (described in another image within this post). Image credit: LIGO-Virgo/Frank Elaysky/Northwestern University.
As well as looking back at the last decade, we take a peak at some recent results with behind the scenes stories about the latest #GravitationalWave catalog with Lucy Thomas, @daniel-williams.co.uk and @michaelpuerrer.bsky.social
#GW10Years
#GWTC4
Exactly 10 years ago, the signal of a gravitational wave from the merger of two black holes arrived on Earth. It was not a special signal, but one like many that had always reached our planet. On that day, however, for the first time humankind was ready to listen to it. (1/7)
Front cover of issue 27 of the LIGO Magazine 10 years of graviational wave astronomy GW150914 to GW231123: a signal that changed to world (p 6) GW231123: the most massive black hole merger yet! (p 24) GWTC-4.0 cataglgue paper (p 20) GW observatories of the future (p 34) Climate change conversations: Fossil-free supercomputing (p 40)
The latest issue of @ligomagazine.bsky.social is out now and free to read
π Celebrate 10 years of gravitational-wave astronomy with us π
ligo.org/wp-content/u...
ππ§ͺβοΈ #GW10Years
The title of the article "10 years of Gravitational Wave Astronomy". The text is written on a purple background. Behind the text are two gravitational-wave signals, GW150914 and GW231123. The signals are displayed as timeseries data - which is like a wiggle increasing in amplitude from left to right, before reducing. Image credit: y LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA/Sascha Rieger.
In this edition, collaboration members past and present share their reflections and memories of the first detection of #GravitationalWaves. Stories range from the very first investigations of #GW150914 to sharing the discovery with the world and the amazing decade of discovery since! π
#GW10Years
Front cover of LIGO Magazine issue 27. The headline article text reads: "10 years of Gravitational Wave Astronomy". Two gravitational wave signals are shown in the main image - they are shown as timeseries data which look wiggles. In the top corner, an illustration of a birthday cake is shown - the cake is being distorted as it is sucked into a black hole! Cover: Main image: GW150914 and GW231123 image by LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA/Sascha Rieger. Top inset: GW231123 plot from LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA. Bottom inset: Masses in the stellar graveyard plot by LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA/Aaron Geller/Northwestern. Bottom-left (diagonal): LISA image from OHB. Top-right corner: GW150914 birthday cake artwork by Storm Colloms.
π New LIGO Magazine out now!! π
Celebrating 10 years of gravitational wave astronomy with a bumper edition!
Read it free online at (pdf):
π ligo.org/wp-content/u...
#GW10Years #LIGOMagazine @ligo.org @egovirgo.bsky.social
Today we celebrate the eight-year anniversary of a discovery that changed astronomy forever: on this day eight years ago @ligo.org and Virgo detected their first ever neutron star merger, GW170817 π₯
New results out today from LIGO (@ligo.org) - Virgo (@egovirgo.bsky.social) - KAGRA !
The latest catalogue features more than double the number of probable signals compared to the previous one!
#GWTC4 paper: arxiv.org/abs/2508.18082