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 »  Home  »  Feature Articles  »  A Brief History of HFGWs
A Brief History of HFGWs
By Dr. Robert Baker | Published  01/29/2006 | Feature Articles | Rating:
Dr. Robert Baker
Robert Baker is one of the world's leading physicists currently pursuing research into High-Frequency Gravity-Waves. His remarkable theoretical work and experimental predictions are turning heads at the highest-levels in the global scientific community. His extensive credentials and remarkable scientific research are online at http://www.gravwave.com, or his personal site at http://www.drrobertbaker.com

View all articles by Dr. Robert Baker
The Birth of HFGW Research

After reviewing the early work of Einstein, Weber, et al. the first mention of High-Frequency Gravitational Waves or HFGWs that I could determine was in a meeting in 1961 that I had with Dr. Robert L. Forward at my Lockheed Astrodynamics Research Center in Bel Air, California. I had invited him over from the Hughes Research Laboratory in Malibu, California to deliver a lecture on the “Weber Bar” that he and Dr. Joseph Weber were constructing at the Hughes Lab to detect Low-Frequency Gravitational Waves. After the lecture Bob and I talked about building a Laboratory generator and detector for “High-Frequency Gravitational Waves.” As far as I know this was the first time the subject had been broached. I recall that we concluded that it could not be accomplished with the technology then available.

The history of Gravitational Waves themselves predated Einstein’s 1916 paper where he discussed Gravitational Waves. Since it was in 1905, several weeks before Einstein presented his Special Theory of Relativity, that Henri Poincaré, the famous French mathematician and Celestial Mechanic, suggested that Newton’s theories needed to be modified by including “Gravitational Waves.”...



PDF Link: A Brief History of High-Frequency Gravitational Waves
File Size: 139kb (PDF 7)
Site: GravWave.Com


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  • Comment #1 (Posted by an unknown user)
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    Great overview info!
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by an unknown user)
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    I am very fascinated by this new reveal of knowledge. Grazy or not but I am a seeker. I want to know more about the possibilities of modern technology and history of sience and experiments.
     
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