Just four months after scientists announced the first detection of gravitational waves - ripples in space time that could help us learn about mysterious objects such as black holes - researchers from the European Space Agency have taken a vital step towards catching some for themselves.
Today, the team behind the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) Pathfinder mission, the prototype of a spacecraft designed to detect gravitational waves from space, announced a record-setting free-fall test.
The test, described in a Physical Review Letters study, showed that the spacecraft's golden innards are capable of experiencing the closest thing to free fall ever observed in a man-made object.
"With LISA Pathfinder, we have created the quietest place known to humankind. Its performance is spectacular and exceeds all our expectations by far," Karsten Danzmann, director at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics and director of the Institute for Gravitational Physics at Leibniz University, in Hanover, Germany, said.
Everything in space, including the International Space Station, is essentially in free fall, falling rapidly under the force of (almost) nothing but gravity. But most objects aren't quite in literal free fall. Lots of things can give satellites and other space objects tiny pushes in one direction or another. Even sunlight exerts physical force on objects it touches.