Mario Schenberg (Gravitational Wave Detector)

The Mario Schenberg (Gravitational Wave Detector, Antenna, or Brazilian Graviton Project[1]) is a spherical, resonant-mass, gravitational wave detector run by the Physics Institute of the University of Sao Paulo. Similar to the Dutch-run MiniGRAIL, the 1.15 ton, 65 cm diameter spherical test mass is suspended in a cryogenic vacuum enclosure, kept at 20 mK.[2][3]

References

  1. ^ Aguiar, et. al (October 2002). "The status of the Brazlian spherical detector.". Class. Quantum Grav. 19 (1949). doi:10.1088/0264-9381/19/7/397. 
  2. ^ Aguiar, et. al (April 2005). "The Brazilian gravitational wave detector Mario Schenberg: progress and plans.". Class. Quantum Grav. 22 (10). doi:10.1088/0264-9381/22/10/011. 
  3. ^ Aguiar, et. al (May 2008). "The Schenberg spherical gravitational wave detector: the first commissioning runs.". Class. Quantum Grav. 25 (11). doi:10.1088/0264-9381/25/11/114042.