Two leading ground-based gravitational wave detectors announced in mid-February that they are teaming up. The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), with one interferometer in Louisiana and two in Washington State, and Virgo, an Italian–French facility located near Pisa, Italy, will mesh their data and data analysis. Money and management will remain separate.

Combining data from the two projects—three, counting Germany and the UK's GEO600, which already has a cozy collaboration with LIGO—has several advantages, says Virgo spokesman Benoît Mours of CNRS's high-energy and astroparticle research center in Annecy, France. “We will be able to get more information from a single source, such as location, because a signal will arrive at different times at our detectors. And we increase sky coverage and can better separate signal from noise. With a weak signal, that's a real plus.”

So far the hunt for gravitational waves from inspiraling compacscodet binaries, pulsars, bursts of unknown...

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