James L. Levine
Computers in Biology and Medicine
I discuss the experiments of Joseph Weber (1919-2000) of the University of Maryland between 1960 and 1973 that were aimed at the detection of gravity waves. He used throughout a quadratic detector to demodulate his antenna signal, which I analyze and compare to a linear detector. The latter was used by all of the other groups that entered the field. Of these, Richard Garwin and I at IBM were one of the first groups to publish, and I discuss in detail our experiments between 1973 and 1975. I then discuss the experiments that were carried out at Bell Labs-Rochester, Glasgow, Munich-Frascati, Moscow, and Tokyo. I compare the results, all of which were negative, with Weber's claimed detection of large numbers of gravity-wave events, as many as seven per day. I conclude that these were not in fact gravity waves, but artifacts of his extremely hands-on data-analysis procedures, which I discuss in detail. Finally, I speculate on how this came about.
James L. Levine
Computers in Biology and Medicine
S.Y. Hsieh, James L. Levine
Physical Review Letters
Richard L. Garwin, James L. Levine
Physical Review Letters
James L. Levine, T.M. Sanders Jr.
Physical Review