Ø With the
discovery of gravitational waves by the U.S.-based LIGO (Laser Interferometer
Gravitational Wave Observatory), Prime Minister Narendra Modi may have tweeted
his support for a similar detector in India but such a project is at least
eight years away, said scientists familiar with the project. This is not
counting the time it will take the Central government to clear the proposal,
estimated to cost around Rs. 1,200
crore, and is further premised on the project not running into environmental or
State-level hurdles. Another ambitious mega-science project, the Indian
Neutrino Observatory (INO) project — a proposed, underground observatory in
Tamil Nadu to detect ephemeral particles called neutrinos — had been cleared by
the Union government in 2015, after several years of deliberations, but has
been stalled for over a year due to protests by activist groups, concerned over
its environmental impact. Scientists associated with the India-LIGO project
(called INDIGO) say that they have, since 2009, done considerable work in
identifying suitable sites in India and met officials in several States. “I
have met the Chief Secretary of Karnataka and others in many States … they are
quite favourable to it [hosting a detector]” said Tarun Souradeep, a key
co-ordinator of INDIGO and physicist at the Inter-University Centre for
Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA). “Eight years is our timeline based on
extensive planning … though it is possible to do it sooner too,” he told The
Hindu. INDIGO will be a replica of the two LIGO detectors and many of its
components have already been built and are ready to be shipped from the United
States. The project was initially to be located in Australia but, since 2011,
scheduled to be located in India. At least 25 sites were considered for the
detector that will, most saliently, have two L-shaped four-kilometre-long arms.
“All of north India is ruled out [as a potential site] because of its
seismicity, as are the deserts of Jodhpur because of sandstorms … the Deccan
Plateau is best suited,” Other than the benefit of having a third detector,
which will likely improve the chances of spotting gravitational waves, an India
detector would improve the chances of novel, exciting discoveries being made
out of India and being made by Indians. Indian scientists have, over 30 years,
contributed substantially to the gravitational wave discovery that was
announced last week. C.V. Vishveshwara and Bala Iyer, formerly of the Raman
Research Institute, Bengaluru, were among the first to solve Einstein’s equations
to derive a mathematical model to explain how colliding blackholes would look
and what tell-tale signals they emitted. In later years, Anand Sengupta of the
Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar, developed methods to ensure that
both the LIGO detectors — separated by 3,000 kilometres — have caught the same
gravitational wave, and Sanjib Mitra of the IUCAA, has found ways to tell apart
gravitational waves from various exotic stars. Naba Mondal, coordinator of the
INO and a physicist at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, said the INO
— being built a kilometre-and-a-half deep under the ground and also employing a
novel design — was a “slightly more” challenging project than INDIGO. “The
delays we have faced so far are due to unfounded objections by some activist
groups. These projects are important for the future of Indian science but
require lot of support from government.”
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