8,489 research outputs found
An Overview of Gravitational-Wave Sources
We review current best estimates of the strength and detectability of the gravitational waves from a variety of sources, for both ground-based and space-based detectors, and we describe the information carried by the waves
The generalized F-statistic: multiple detectors and multiple GW pulsars
The F-statistic, derived by Jaranowski, Krolak & Schutz (1998), is the
optimal (frequentist) statistic for the detection of nearly periodic
gravitational waves from known neutron stars, in the presence of stationary,
Gaussian detector noise. The F-statistic was originally derived for the case of
a single detector, whose noise spectral density was assumed constant in time,
and for a single known neutron star. Here we show how the F-statistic can be
straightforwardly generalized to the cases of 1) a network of detectors with
time-varying noise curves, and 2) a population of known sources. Fortunately,
all the important ingredients that go into our generalized F-statistics are
already calculated in the single-source/single-detector searches that are
currently implemented, e.g., in the LIGO Software Library, so implementation of
optimal multi-detector, multi-source searches should require negligible
additional cost in computational power or software development.Comment: 6 pages, 0 figures, submitted to PRD; section IV substantially
enlarged and revised, and a few typos correcte
The Angular Resolution of Space-Based Gravitational Wave Detectors
Proposed space-based gravitational wave antennas involve satellites arrayed
either in an equilateral triangle around the earth in the ecliptic plane (the
ecliptic-plane option) or in an equilateral triangle orbiting the sun in such a
way that the plane of the triangle is tilted at 60 degrees relative to the
ecliptic (the precessing-plane option). In this paper, we explore the angular
resolution of these two classes of detectors for two kinds of sources
(essentially monochromatic compact binaries and coalescing massive-black-hole
binaries) using time-domain expressions for the gravitational waveform that are
accurate to 4/2 PN order. Our results display an interesting effect not
previously reported in the literature, and underline the importance of
including the higher-order PN terms in the waveform when predicting the angular
resolution of ecliptic-plane detector arrays.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys Rev D. The current version
corrects an error in our original paper and adds some clarifying language.
The error also required correction of the graphs now shown in Figures 3
through
The information content of gravitational wave harmonics in compact binary inspiral
The nonlinear aspect of gravitational wave generation that produces power at
harmonics of the orbital frequency, above the fundamental quadrupole frequency,
is examined to see what information about the source is contained in these
higher harmonics. We use an order (4/2) post-Newtonian expansion of the
gravitational wave waveform of a binary system to model the signal seen in a
spaceborne gravitational wave detector such as the proposed LISA detector.
Covariance studies are then performed to determine the ultimate accuracy to be
expected when the parameters of the source are fit to the received signal. We
find three areas where the higher harmonics contribute crucial information that
breaks degeneracies in the model and allows otherwise badly-correlated
parameters to be separated and determined. First, we find that the position of
a coalescing massive black hole binary in an ecliptic plane detector, such as
OMEGA, is well-determined with the help of these harmonics. Second, we find
that the individual masses of the stars in a chirping neutron star binary can
be separated because of the mass dependence of the harmonic contributions to
the wave. Finally, we note that supermassive black hole binaries, whose
frequencies are too low to be seen in the detector sensitivity window for long,
may still have their masses, distances, and positions determined since the
information content of the higher harmonics compensates for the information
lost when the orbit-induced modulation of the signal does not last long enough
to be apparent in the data.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Thermal and electromagnetic radiation from dust structures
Dust particle behavior as possible structured arrays for thermal and electromagnetic radiators in space environment
Regularization of the second-order gravitational perturbations produced by a compact object
The equations for the second-order gravitational perturbations produced by a
compact-object have highly singular source terms at the point particle limit.
At this limit the standard retarded solutions to these equations are
ill-defined. Here we construct well-defined and physically meaningful solutions
to these equations. These solutions are important for practical calculations:
the planned gravitational-wave detector LISA requires preparation of waveform
templates for the potential gravitational-waves. Construction of templates with
desired accuracy for extreme mass ratio binaries, in which a compact-object
inspirals towards a supermassive black-hole, requires calculation of the
second-order gravitational perturbations produced by the compact-object.Comment: 12 pages, discussion expanded, to be published in Phys. Rev. D Rapid
Communicatio
Construction of the second-order gravitational perturbations produced by a compact object
Accurate calculation of the gradual inspiral motion in an extreme mass-ratio
binary system, in which a compact-object inspirals towards a supermassive
black-hole requires calculation of the interaction between the compact-object
and the gravitational perturbations that it induces. These metric perturbations
satisfy linear partial differential equations on a curved background spacetime
induced by the supermassive black-hole. At the point particle limit the
second-order perturbations equations have source terms that diverge as
, where is the distance from the particle. This singular behavior
renders the standard retarded solutions of these equations ill-defined. Here we
resolve this problem and construct well-defined and physically meaningful
solutions to these equations. We recently presented an outline of this
resolution [E. Rosenthal, Phys. Rev. D 72, 121503 (2005)]. Here we provide the
full details of this analysis. These second-order solutions are important for
practical calculations: the planned gravitational-wave detector LISA requires
preparation of waveform templates for the expected gravitational-waves.
Construction of templates with desired accuracy for extreme mass-ratio binaries
requires accurate calculation of the inspiral motion including the interaction
with the second-order gravitational perturbations.Comment: 30 page
Public knowledge about polar regions increases while concerns remain unchanged
The authors of this brief conduct the first comparative analysis of the polar questions that were part of the National Opinion Research Center\u27s 2006 and 2010 General Social Survey. Developed by scientists at the National Science Foundation\u27s Office of Polar Programs, these questions covered topics such as climate change, melting ice and rising sea levels, and species extinction. The authors report that the public\u27s knowledge about the north and south polar regions significantly improved between 2006 and 2010--before and after the International Polar Year. In addition, respondents who know more about science in general, and polar facts specifically, tend to be more concerned about polar changes. More knowledgeable respondents also tend to favor reserving the Antarctic for science, rather than opening it for commercial development
Effects of finite arm-length of LISA on analysis of gravitational waves from MBH binaries
Response of an interferometer becomes complicated for gravitational wave
shorter than the arm-length of the detector, as nature of wave appears
strongly. We have studied how parameter estimation for merging massive black
hole binaries are affected by this complicated effect in the case of LISA. It
is shown that three dimensional positions of some binaries might be determined
much better than the past estimations that use the long wave approximation. For
equal mass binaries this improvement is most prominent at \sim 10^5\sol.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys.Rev.
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