Re: LIGO can SEE.



On 24 jan, 11:27, Eric Gisse <jowr...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jan 24, 4:30 am, srp2...@xxxxxxxxx wrote:



On 23 jan, 15:06, "Duatcher" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

"Douglas Eagleson" <eaglesondoug...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message

news:e9f2b42c-7ea2-4f10-b392-c6dff73d3c47@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

LIGO was to see! A star truly dismantle. And the method was the long
interferometer. A side was distorted while the length was the same. A
time-to-fly the range is a signal now.

LIGO apparently wiggles as a whole making the path alter not in
expectation. A wave then becomes classical in form an allows all
further wave investigation to so see.

Wiggling interferometers are odd affairs to see with. It must have
been a happy day to get the signal understood at LIGO. A laser timed
pulse will always occur as absolute time in a system of
interferometers. Allowing all to understand. The news release was
understated.

It must have been amazing.

http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=24501(ref. the other
LIGO posting)

The article says LIGO did not see anything at all.

Exact.

They would stand a better chance of detecting something if they
tested during solar eclipses, when the moon aligns with the Sun.

...why?



Allais' pendulum and other devices detected an anomaly in such
circumstance.

Yet nobody can consistently reproduce the observation,

You are wrong as is so typical of you.

Your moto: "I must never look further than the tip of my nose, 'cause
if I don't look too far, I am certain of being right"

André Michaud

and the
observations that do see something are inconsistent with eachother.
Not really a good start.



André Michaud

.



Relevant Pages

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