If our civilization collapses, extraterrestrial archeologists can look at this and be impressed. Three satellites following the Earth in an equilateral triangle, each 2.5 million kilometers from the other two. Each contains two gold cubes in free-fall. The satellites accelerate just enough so they don't get blown off course by the solar wind. The gold cubes inside feel nothing but gravity.

Lasers bounce between each cube and its partner in another satellite, measuring the distance between them to an accuracy of 20 picometers: less than the diameter of a helium atom! This lets the satellites detect gravitational waves — ripples in the curvature of spacetime — with very long wavelengths, and correspondingly low frequencies.

It should see so many binary white dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes in the Milky Way that these will be nothing but foreground noise. More excitingly, it should see mergers of supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies as far as... the dawn of time, or whenever such black holes were first formed. (The farther you look, the older things you see.)

It may even be able to see the "gravitational background radiation": the thrumming vibrations in the fabric of spacetime left over from the Big Bang. These gravitational waves were created before the hot gas in the Universe cooled down enough to become transparent to light. So they're older than the microwave background radiation, which is the oldest thing we see now.

It's called LISA - the Laser Interferometric Satellite Antenna. And we're in luck: ESA has just decided to launch it in 2035.

@johncarlosbaez

Science is exponential, tech and human support is exponential. The growth in economic capacity since WW2 is exponential. 14 people make half a million tons of steel a year. A country smaller than Cuba is the 2nd largest exporter of food. Wealth is available to every human, denying it is an intentional crime. Paying living wages would supercharge the economy.

Humans are emerging.

Our only crisis is Billionaires are trying to take the new world from us.

#Climate #poverty

Mind blown: Cuba is a huge country compared to the Netherlands:

Cuba: 110,860 km²
Netherlands: 41,865 km²

(via Wikipedia)

Where were all the practical geography lessons when I was in school?

@kevinrns @johncarlosbaez