> Since we don't have a Science board yet, I'll ask here.
> From the main page:
>
> Feb 7, 2005
>
> The LIGO Scientific Collaboration Calibration Team has released the final (v3)
> calibration information for the S3 data run. In the next several days we will
> be replacing our current search data set (which uses the v2 calibration) with
> the v3 version.
>
>
> I've been googling around, but information pertaining to this subject is
> password protected, e.g. here
> https://gravity.phys.uwm.edu/lscnews/
>
> Does this also mean that we're starting to do real science now, or will this
> data be revisited when the project opens for the public?
We're doing real science now: currently analyzing 600 hours of the most sensitive gravitational wave data ever taken. Since we are going to go public very soon, we thought it made sense to put the final version of the calibrated data into place first.
Bruce

Einstein@Home Science
)
For the non-German speaking:
This is a TV stream (with some bad video-audio offset) grabbed from
the German digital channel "BR Alpha", 14 minutes long, with the subject
of anti-gravity. Listening to it now...
S.
> Is this the equlant to the
)
> Is this the equlant to the old AstroPulse beta project or just the Pulsar part of it ?
Rather unrelated. The waves we are looking for are not electromagnetic and thus can't be caught with radio telescopes. There are probably, however, pulsars and other sources that emit both types of waves.
BM
BM