Tom knew that within these changes lay the mysteries of the graviton.
During that brief 0.3-second period, with only a 2-nanometer length change, all the changes in this column during that process had been detected by the ubiquitous detectors.
In such a short time, this detector generated approximately 8 million TB of observation data.
Using Primal as a tool, Tom's hundreds of millions of clones, plus about 100 million scientists from corresponding fields, all dedicated themselves to the analysis of this data.
Less than five hours after this gravitational wave event, another gravitational wave event arrived. This time, Gravity One Telescope showed a length change of about 0.8 nanometers, generating approximately 7.2 million TB of data again.
On average, this telescope would observe about three gravitational wave events per day.
And after the second telescope was completed, the number of observed events was still three, but the data volume doubled.
