A brief history of gravitational wave research
Chiang-Mei Chen, James M. Nester, Wei-Tou Ni

TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical development, theoretical debates, and recent experimental achievements in gravitational wave research, highlighting key milestones from Einstein's predictions to modern detections by advanced interferometers.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the evolution of gravitational wave theory and experiments, emphasizing recent direct detections and future detection efforts across the spectrum.
Findings
First direct GW detections by LIGO in 2015
Advanced LIGO achieved strain sensitivity of 10^-22
Space-based detectors like LISA Pathfinder reached goal sensitivity
Abstract
For the benefit of the readers of this journal, the editors requested that we prepare a brief review of the history of the development of the theory, the experimental attempts to detect them, and the recent direct observations of gravitational waves (GWs). The theoretical ideas and disputes beginning with Einstein in 1916 regarding the existence and nature of GWs and the extent to which one can rely on the electromagnetic analogy, especially the controversies regarding the quadrupole formula and whether GWs carry energy, are discussed. The theoretical conclusions eventually received strong observational support from the binary pulsar. This provided compelling, although indirect, evidence for GWs carrying away energy--as predicted by the quadrupole formula. On the direct detection experimental side, Weber started more than 50 years ago. In 1966, his bar for GW detection reached a strain…
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