126 research outputs found
Towards a gravitational wave observatory designer: sensitivity limits of spaceborne detectors
The most promising concept for low frequency (millihertz to hertz) gravitational wave observatories are laser interferometric detectors in space. It is usually assumed that the noise floor for such a detector is dominated by optical shot noise in the signal readout. For this to be true, a careful balance of mission parameters is crucial to keep all other parasitic disturbances below shot noise. We developed a web application that uses over 30 input parameters and considers many important technical noise sources and noise suppression techniques to derive a realistic position noise budget. It optimizes free parameters automatically and generates a detailed report on all individual noise contributions. Thus one can easily explore the entire parameter space and design a realistic gravitational wave observatory. In this document we describe the different parameters, present all underlying calculations, and compare the final observatory's sensitivity with astrophysical sources of gravitational waves. We use as an example parameters currently assumed to be likely applied to a space mission proposed to be launched in 2034 by the European Space Agency. The web application itself is publicly available on the Internet at http://spacegravity.org/designer. Future versions of the web application will incorporate the frequency dependence of different noise sources and include a more detailed model of the observatory's residual acceleration noise
Breadboard model of the LISA phasemeter
An elegant breadboard model of the LISA phasemeter is currently under
development by a Danish-German consortium. The breadboard is build in the frame
of an ESA technology development activity to demonstrate the feasibility and
readiness of the LISA metrology baseline architecture. This article gives an
overview about the breadboard design and its components, including the
distribution of key functionalities.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, published in ASP Conference Series, Vol. 467, 9th
LISA Symposium (2012), pp 271-27
Readout for intersatellite laser interferometry: Measuring low frequency phase fluctuations of HF signals with microradian precision
Precision phase readout of optical beat note signals is one of the core
techniques required for intersatellite laser interferometry. Future space based
gravitational wave detectors like eLISA require such a readout over a wide
range of MHz frequencies, due to orbit induced Doppler shifts, with a precision
in the order of at frequencies between
and . In this paper, we present phase
readout systems, so-called phasemeters, that are able to achieve such
precisions and we discuss various means that have been employed to reduce noise
in the analogue circuit domain and during digitisation. We also discuss the
influence of some non-linear noise sources in the analogue domain of such
phasemeters. And finally, we present the performance that was achieved during
testing of the elegant breadboard model of the LISA phasemeter, that was
developed in the scope of an ESA technology development activity.Comment: submitted to Review of Scientific Instruments on April 30th 201
The Differential Effect of Anxiety and ADHD Symptoms on Inhibitory Control and Sustained Attention for Threat Stimuli: A Go/No-Go Eye-Movement Study
Objective: This study examined the synergistic effects of ADHD and anxiety symptoms on attention and inhibitory control depending on the emotional content of the stimuli. Method: Fifty-four typically developing individuals (27 children/adolescents and 27 adults) completed an eye-movement based emotional Go/No-Go task, using centrally presented (happy, angry) faces and neutral/symbolic stimuli. Sustained attention was measured through saccade latencies and saccadic omission errors (Go trials), and inhibitory control through saccadic commission errors (No-Go trials). ADHD and anxiety were assessed dimensionally. Results: Elevated ADHD symptoms were associated with more commission errors and slower saccade latencies for angry (vs. happy) faces. In contrast, angry faces were linked to faster saccade onsets when anxiety symptoms were high, and this effect prevailed when both anxiety and ADHD symptoms were high. Conclusion: Social threat impacted performance in individuals with sub-clinical anxiety and ADHD differently. The effects of anxiety on threat processing prevailed when both symptoms were high
Der Lifter - Ein Flugobjekt mit Ionenantrieb -
Der in diesem Artikel vorgestellte Lifter ist ein faszinierendes Flugobjekt, das ohne bewegliche Elemente, stattdessen durch einen Ionenantrieb zum Schweben gebracht werden kann. Obwohl oder gerade weil der Lifter aus so einfachen Materialien wie Draht, Strohhalmen und Aluminiumfolie gebaut werden kann, zieht er viel Aufmerksamkeit auf sich und ruft immer wieder Staunen und fragende Gesichter hervor. Im Folgenden wird eine Bauanleitung des Lifters sowie eine einfache Theorie zur Funktionsweise vorgestellt. Die theoretischen Ergebnisse werden durch verschiedene Experimentiervorschläge ergänzt und durch die entsprechenden Messergebnisse gestütz
Der Lifter - Ein Flugobjekt mit Ionenantrieb -
Der in diesem Artikel vorgestellte Lifter ist ein faszinierendes Flugobjekt, das ohne bewegliche Elemente, stattdessen durch einen Ionenantrieb zum Schweben gebracht werden kann. Obwohl oder gerade weil der Lifter aus so einfachen Materialien wie Draht, Strohhalmen und Aluminiumfolie gebaut werden kann, zieht er viel Aufmerksamkeit auf sich und ruft immer wieder Staunen und fragende Gesichter hervor. Im Folgenden wird eine Bauanleitung des Lifters sowie eine einfache Theorie zur Funktionsweise vorgestellt. Die theoretischen Ergebnisse werden durch verschiedene Experimentiervorschläge ergänzt und durch die entsprechenden Messergebnisse gestütz
Impaired Memory for Instructions in Children with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Is Improved by Action at Presentation and Recall
Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) often fail to comply with teacher instructions in the classroom. Using action during presentation or recall can enhance typically developing children’s abilities to complete multi-step instruction sequences. In this study, we tested the ability to following instructions in children with ADHD under different conditions to explore whether they show the same beneficial effects of action. A total of 24 children with ADHD and 27 typically developing children either listened to or viewed demonstrations of instructions during encoding, and then either verbally repeated or physically performed the sequences during recall. This resulted in four conditions: spoken-verbal, spoken-enacted, demonstration-verbal, and demonstration-enacted. Children with ADHD were significantly impaired in all conditions of the following instructions task relative to the typically developing group. Both groups showed an enacted-recall advantage, with superior recall by physical performance than oral repetition. Both groups also benefitted from demonstration over spoken presentation, but only when the instructions were recalled verbally. These findings suggest that children with ADHD struggle to complete multi-step instructions, but that they benefit from action-based presentation and recall in the same way as typically developing children. These findings have important implications for educators, suggesting that motor-based methods of instruction-delivery might enhance classroom learning both for children with and without developmental disorders
Space Based Gravitational Wave Astronomy Beyond LISA
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) will open three decades of gravitational wave(GW) spectrum between 0.1 and 100 mHz, the mHz band [1]. This band is expected to be the richest part of the GW spectrum, in types of sources, numbers of sources, signal-to-noise ratios and discovery potential. When LISA opens the low-frequency window of the gravitational wave spectrum,around 2034, the surge of gravitational-wave astronomy will strongly compel a subsequent mission to further explore the frequency bands of the GW spectrum that can only be accessed from space. The 2020's is the time to start developing technology and studying mission concepts for a large-scale mission to be launched in the 2040's. The mission concept would then be proposed to Astro2030. Only space-based missions can access the GW spectrum between 108 and 1 Hz because of the Earth's seismic noise. This white paper surveys the science in this band and mission concepts that could accomplish that science. The proposed small scale activity is a technology development program that would support a range of concepts and a mission concept study to choose a specific mission concept for Astro2030. In this white paper, we will refer to a generic GW mission beyond LISA as bLISA
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