Quarter Million Mark

LivingDog
LivingDog
Joined: 21 Nov 05
Posts: 97
Credit: 1792686
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Topic 192849

I'd say woohoo, but since the results are never relayed to a member in any palatable form then all I can say is 'woot'.

PS: WOOHOO!!! >> woohoo! > woohoo >> woot.

This makes me wish there was a "page for dummies" for both one's own returned results as well as for the entire E@H project. :/ No?

Anyway, 250,000 credits and crunching...

-LD
________________________________________
my faith

John Clark
John Clark
Joined: 4 May 07
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Credit: 3143193
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Quarter Million Mark

Congratulations

Shih-Tzu are clever, cuddly, playful and rule!! Jack Russell are feisty!

Jord
Joined: 26 Jan 05
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RE: This makes me wish

Quote:
This makes me wish there was a "page for dummies" for both one's own returned results as well as for the entire E@H project. :/ No?


You mean the Milestone thread? ;-)

Sarge
Sarge
Joined: 29 Apr 07
Posts: 98
Credit: 62922
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RE: RE: This makes me

Message 68173 in response to message 68172

Quote:
Quote:
This makes me wish there was a "page for dummies" for both one's own returned results as well as for the entire E@H project. :/ No?

You mean the Milestone thread? ;-)


I think he means a page, not a thread, where he can see his totals and all of E@H's totals. Auto-updated with each new visit, not due to new postings and not seeing just other individuals' totals.

LivingDog
LivingDog
Joined: 21 Nov 05
Posts: 97
Credit: 1792686
RAC: 0

RE: RE: RE: This makes

Message 68174 in response to message 68173

Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
This makes me wish there was a "page for dummies" for both one's own returned results as well as for the entire E@H project. :/ No?

You mean the Milestone thread? ;-)

I think he means a page, not a thread, where he can see his totals and all of E@H's totals. Auto-updated with each new visit, not due to new postings and not seeing just other individuals' totals.

Sorry I didn't make myself clear. HEre is what I mean in detail:

1) which of my results is meaningful: the most, the medium, the least,
2) what does the result mean?
3) what is quantum gravity?

Answers for normal people - not physicists with brains the size of a planet. :)

thx!

-LD
________________________________________
my faith

Chipper Q
Chipper Q
Joined: 20 Feb 05
Posts: 1540
Credit: 708571
RAC: 0

RE: 1) which of my results

Quote:
1) which of my results is meaningful: the most, the medium, the least,


All the validated ones are meaningful: results with possible signals in them more so than those without.

Quote:
2) what does the result mean?


We're making progress in the search for gravity waves, one way or another.

Quote:
3) what is quantum gravity?


An attempt at reconciliation of incompatible theories, namely quantum mechanics and general relativity.

Surely there are better answers, but hopefully those are helpful. :)

LivingDog
LivingDog
Joined: 21 Nov 05
Posts: 97
Credit: 1792686
RAC: 0

RE: RE: 1) which of my

Message 68176 in response to message 68175

Quote:
Quote:
1) which of my results is meaningful: the most, the medium, the least,

All the validated ones are meaningful: results with possible signals in them more so than those without.
Quote:
2) what does the result mean?

We're making progress in the search for gravity waves, one way or another.
Quote:
3) what is quantum gravity?

An attempt at reconciliation of incompatible theories, namely quantum mechanics and general relativity.

Surely there are better answers, but hopefully those are helpful. :)

1) I knew that stuff, perhaps more details. E.g. are they detecting radio waves or ... what ARE they detecting?? I mean it can't be radio waves, no? That's light and E = hv (nu). But gravity has to do with mass, and the collapse of a star would emit those waves... so how do you detect a wave of gravity?

2) where is the wave in the data? If it was a light wave then Iknow it would be an amplitude of some kind. The peak would indicate a wave is present. So where is the peak in the data? Have there been no "peaks"??

3) Could they tell us something like: "Your result has of a gravity wave."?

-LD
________________________________________
my faith

Chipper Q
Chipper Q
Joined: 20 Feb 05
Posts: 1540
Credit: 708571
RAC: 0

RE: RE: RE: 1) which of

Message 68177 in response to message 68176

Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
1) which of my results is meaningful: the most, the medium, the least,

All the validated ones are meaningful: results with possible signals in them more so than those without.
Quote:
2) what does the result mean?

We're making progress in the search for gravity waves, one way or another.
Quote:
3) what is quantum gravity?

An attempt at reconciliation of incompatible theories, namely quantum mechanics and general relativity.

Surely there are better answers, but hopefully those are helpful. :)

1) I knew that stuff, perhaps more details. E.g. are they detecting radio waves or ... what ARE they detecting?? I mean it can't be radio waves, no? That's light and E = hv (nu). But gravity has to do with mass, and the collapse of a star would emit those waves... so how do you detect a wave of gravity?


The length of the arms in the interferometer changes from passing gravity waves. There are different kinds of astronomical events that produce the waves, hence different types of signals. When you detect a signal (by measuring the same changes in all the respective interferometers) it will match a pattern that will identify whether the waves came from something like a supernova, or from a binary system, or from a specific type of star that's rotating...

Quote:

2) where is the wave in the data? If it was a light wave then Iknow it would be an amplitude of some kind. The peak would indicate a wave is present. So where is the peak in the data? Have there been no "peaks"??


The peak in the data would come from an excessive amount of photons hitting a photodiode in one of the ports of the interferometer. Probably no trouble with finding peaks in the data. The hard part is eliminating peaks from all other sources, and then finding the same pattern in data from the other interferometers. When that happens, you'll likely hear about it in the news.

Quote:

3) Could they tell us something like: "Your result has of a gravity wave."?


Not sure, but I think that post-processing of all the validated results would make that difficult to do... Some kind of notification or benchmark would be nice :)

We're currently crunching data in a 'hierarchical' search, which means all the Work Units have a higher probability of success, I would guess.

LivingDog
LivingDog
Joined: 21 Nov 05
Posts: 97
Credit: 1792686
RAC: 0

RE: 3) Could they tell us

Message 68178 in response to message 68177

Quote:

3) Could they tell us something like: "Your result has of a gravity wave."?

Quote:

Not sure, but I think that post-processing of all the validated results would make that difficult to do... Some kind of notification or benchmark would be nice :)

We're currently crunching data in a 'hierarchical' search, which means all the Work Units have a higher probability of success, I would guess.

This last question is what I am really after - a sense of my contribution to the research... I mean my computers contribution of course.

Thanks Chipper!

-LD
________________________________________
my faith

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