Such “GRADAR” signals could spot globs of dark matter or very distant neutron stars
It sounds like the setup for a joke: If radio waves give you radar and sound gives you sonar, what do gravitational waves get you?
The answer might be “GRADAR” — gravitational wave “radar” — a potential future technology that could use reflections of gravitational waves to map the unseen universe, say researchers in a paper accepted to Physical Review Letters. By looking for these signals, scientists may be able to find dark matter or dim, exotic stars and learn about their deep insides.
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