It's got things going in circles, so it's relevant to control line. And it's got things in space, and really precise measurements, and wacky control systems -- so it's relevant to Brett.Enjoy (or not). I suspect that Brett's already on top of this:
Sorry to disappoint, but I hadn't even heard of this. It sounds like a double-sensor version of Gravity Probe B, at first blush. Gravity Probe B navigated a spacecraft around a spinning gyro rotor/ball as it fell freely. I can see how you can navigate it around the cubes, I suppose, as long as you have an actuator that moves the enclosures further apart or closer together. It has to sense the motion of the cube WRT the housing somehow, so I guess they figured out that the force applied by the photons needed for the sensing put little enough force on the cube to not obscure the effect they are looking for. The people involved are usually pretty good at that sort of thing. Very interesting project. Brett
You'd also need some way to get the cubes travelling in formation well enough that your enclosures don't run out of range of travel.
Presumably, you run the experiment for as long as you can accommodate the relative motion, then cage the cubes, recenter them, then release them again and start up the next experiment. Same with launch, you have to hold them solidly somehow until you in the final orbit and stable enough to start, just restow them when they get too far apart. Brett
Incredibly interesting stuff. It's only taken about 100 years to catch reality up with the mind of Dr. Einstein.
There were actually experimental results in General Relativity within ten or twenty years of it's formulation -- the perihelion of Mercury precesses ever so slightly, in a way that's not at all predicted by Newtonion mechanics but which is dead on to the predictions of Relativity.One of the sources of excitement I've been seeing on this that's not in this particular video is that this is the first time that astronomers are getting real information about stellar events that are carried by something other than photons. Everything else we get is electromagnetic radiation of some sort -- so gravity-wave astronomy is like opening a whole new window.
Yeah...the biggest problem is finding the "window". This time they admittedly got very lucky. Events like that don't happen every day andand as stated, last a second or so! Talk about lucky data collection.