6,793 research outputs found
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
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
Report on the first round of the Mock LISA Data Challenges
The Mock LISA Data Challenges (MLDCs) have the dual purpose of fostering the development of LISA data analysis tools and capabilities, and demonstrating the technical readiness already achieved by the gravitational-wave community in distilling a rich science payoff from the LISA data output. The first round of MLDCs has just been completed: nine challenges consisting of data sets containing simulated gravitational-wave signals produced either by galactic binaries or massive black hole binaries embedded in simulated LISA instrumental noise were released in June 2006 with deadline for submission of results at the beginning of December 2006. Ten groups have participated in this first round of challenges. All of the challenges had at least one entry which successfully characterized the signal to better than 95% when assessed via a correlation with phasing ambiguities accounted for. Here, we describe the challenges, summarize the results and provide a first critical assessment of the entries
Compression of Martian atmosphere for production of oxygen
The compression of CO2 from the Martian atmosphere for production of O2 via an electrochemical cell is addressed. Design specifications call for an oxygen production rate of 10 kg per day and for compression of 50 times that mass of CO2. Those specifications require a compression rate of over 770 cfm at standard Martian temperature and pressure (SMTP). Much of the CO2 being compressed represents waste, unless it can be recycled. Recycling can reduce the volume of gas that must be compressed to 40 cfm at SMTP. That volume reduction represents significant mass savings in the compressor, heating equipment, filters, and energy source. Successful recycle of the gas requires separation of CO (produced in the electrochemical cell) from CO2, N2, and Ar found in the Martian atmosphere. That aspect was the focus of this work
BBO and the Neutron-Star-Binary Subtraction Problem
The Big Bang Observer (BBO) is a proposed space-based gravitational-wave (GW)
mission designed primarily to search for an inflation-generated GW background
in the frequency range 0.1-1 Hz. The major astrophysical foreground in this
range is gravitational radiation from inspiraling compact binaries. This
foreground is expected to be much larger than the inflation-generated
background, so to accomplish its main goal, BBO must be sensitive enough to
identify and subtract out practically all such binaries in the observable
universe. It is somewhat subtle to decide whether BBO's current baseline design
is sufficiently sensitive for this task, since, at least initially, the
dominant noise source impeding identification of any one binary is confusion
noise from all the others. Here we present a self-consistent scheme for
deciding whether BBO's baseline design is indeed adequate for subtracting out
the binary foreground. We conclude that the current baseline should be
sufficient. However if BBO's instrumental sensitivity were degraded by a factor
2-4, it could no longer perform its main mission. It is impossible to perfectly
subtract out each of the binary inspiral waveforms, so an important question is
how to deal with the "residual" errors in the post-subtraction data stream. We
sketch a strategy of "projecting out" these residual errors, at the cost of
some effective bandwidth. We also provide estimates of the sizes of various
post-Newtonian effects in the inspiral waveforms that must be accounted for in
the BBO analysis.Comment: corrects some errors in figure captions that are present in the
published versio
Angular Resolution of the LISA Gravitational Wave Detector
We calculate the angular resolution of the planned LISA detector, a
space-based laser interferometer for measuring low-frequency gravitational
waves from galactic and extragalactic sources. LISA is not a pointed
instrument; it is an all-sky monitor with a quadrupolar beam pattern. LISA will
measure simultaneously both polarization components of incoming gravitational
waves, so the data will consist of two time series. All physical properties of
the source, including its position, must be extracted from these time series.
LISA's angular resolution is therefore not a fixed quantity, but rather depends
on the type of signal and on how much other information must be extracted.
Information about the source position will be encoded in the measured signal in
three ways: 1) through the relative amplitudes and phases of the two
polarization components, 2) through the periodic Doppler shift imposed on the
signal by the detector's motion around the Sun, and 3) through the further
modulation of the signal caused by the detector's time-varying orientation. We
derive the basic formulae required to calculate the LISA's angular resolution
for a given source. We then evaluate for
two sources of particular interest: monchromatic sources and mergers of
supermassive black holes. For these two types of sources, we calculate (in the
high signal-to-noise approximation) the full variance-covariance matrix, which
gives the accuracy to which all source parameters can be measured. Since our
results on LISA's angular resolution depend mainly on gross features of the
detector geometry, orbit, and noise curve, we expect these results to be fairly
insensitive to modest changes in detector design that may occur between now and
launch. We also expect that our calculations could be easily modified to apply
to a modified design.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, RevTex 3.0 fil
LISA, binary stars, and the mass of the graviton
We extend and improve earlier estimates of the ability of the proposed LISA
(Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) gravitational wave detector to place upper
bounds on the graviton mass, m_g, by comparing the arrival times of
gravitational and electromagnetic signals from binary star systems. We show
that the best possible limit on m_g obtainable this way is ~ 50 times better
than the current limit set by Solar System measurements. Among currently known,
well-understood binaries, 4U1820-30 is the best for this purpose; LISA
observations of 4U1820-30 should yield a limit ~ 3-4 times better than the
present Solar System bound. AM CVn-type binaries offer the prospect of
improving the limit by a factor of 10, if such systems can be better understood
by the time of the LISA mission. We briefly discuss the likelihood that radio
and optical searches during the next decade will yield binaries that more
closely approach the best possible case.Comment: ReVTeX 4, 6 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys Rev
The Effect of the LISA Response Function on Observations of Monochromatic Sources
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is expected to provide the
largest observational sample of binary systems of faint sub-solar mass compact
objects, in particular white-dwarfs, whose radiation is monochromatic over most
of the LISA observational window. Current astrophysical estimates suggest that
the instrument will be able to resolve about 10000 such systems, with a large
fraction of them at frequencies above 3 mHz, where the wavelength of
gravitational waves becomes comparable to or shorter than the LISA arm-length.
This affects the structure of the so-called LISA transfer function which cannot
be treated as constant in this frequency range: it introduces characteristic
phase and amplitude modulations that depend on the source location in the sky
and the emission frequency. Here we investigate the effect of the LISA transfer
function on detection and parameter estimation for monochromatic sources. For
signal detection we show that filters constructed by approximating the transfer
function as a constant (long wavelength approximation) introduce a negligible
loss of signal-to-noise ratio -- the fitting factor always exceeds 0.97 -- for
f below 10mHz, therefore in a frequency range where one would actually expect
the approximation to fail. For parameter estimation, we conclude that in the
range 3mHz to 30mHz the errors associated with parameter measurements differ
from about 5% up to a factor of 10 (depending on the actual source parameters
and emission frequency) with respect to those computed using the long
wavelength approximation.Comment: replacement version with typos correcte
LISA Response Function and Parameter Estimation
We investigate the response function of LISA and consider the adequacy of its
commonly used approximation in the high-frequency range of the observational
band. We concentrate on monochromatic binary systems, such as white dwarf
binaries. We find that above a few mHz the approxmation starts becoming
increasingly inaccurate. The transfer function introduces additional amplitude
and phase modulations in the measured signal that influence parameter estmation
and, if not properly accounted for, lead to losses of signal-to-noise ratio.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, amaldi 5 conference proceeding
Colliding Black Holes: The Close Limit
The problem of the mutual attraction and joining of two black holes is of
importance as both a source of gravitational waves and as a testbed of
numerical relativity. If the holes start out close enough that they are
initially surrounded by a common horizon, the problem can be viewed as a
perturbation of a single black hole. We take initial data due to Misner for
close black holes, apply perturbation theory and evolve the data with the
Zerilli equation. The computed gravitational radiation agrees with and extends
the results of full numerical computations.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, 3 postscript figures included, CGPG-94/2-
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