ESA title
Agency

LISA Pathfinder Results

Date: Tue, Jun 07, 2016 | 17:30 - 17:45 GMT | 19:30 - 19:45 CEST

Replay: Wed, Jun 08, 2016 | 06:30 - 06:45 GMT | 08:30 - 08:45 CEST

Type: ESA TV Exchange

Format: 16:9

Launched in December 2015, LISA Pathfinder travelled to its operational orbit, 1.5 million km from Earth towards the Sun, where it started its scientific mission on 1 March.

At the core of the spacecraft, two identical gold–platinum cubes, are being held in the most precise freefall ever produced in space.

Placing the test masses in a motion subject only to gravity is the challenging condition needed to build and operate a future space mission to observe gravitational waves. Predicted by Albert Einstein a century ago, gravitational waves are fluctuations in the fabric of spacetime, which were recently detected directly for the first time by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory.

Over the first two months of scientific operations, the LISA Pathfinder team has performed a number of experiments on the test masses to prove the feasibility of gravitational wave observation from space.

These results are explained in this video with interviews with Paul McNamara, LISA Pathfinder Project scientist, ESA and two Lisa Pathfinder Principal Investigators: Rita DOLES, University of Trento and Martin Hewitson, University of Hannover.

More information at: http://sci.esa.int/lisa-pathfinder/

Preview and download:
https://www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Videos/2016/06/LISA_Pathfinder_results

Script:
EbSI-121718.doc