5,580 research outputs found
A trapped mercury 199 ion frequency standard
Mercury 199 ions confined in an RF quadrupole trap and optically pumped by mercury 202 ion resonance light are investigated as the basis for a high performance frequency standard with commercial possibilities. Results achieved and estimates of the potential performance of such a standard are given
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
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
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.
Design and implementation of a compliant robot with force feedback and strategy planning software
Force-feedback robotics techniques are being developed for automated precision assembly and servicing of NASA space flight equipment. Design and implementation of a prototype robot which provides compliance and monitors forces is in progress. Computer software to specify assembly steps and makes force feedback adjustments during assembly are coded and tested for three generically different precision mating problems. A model program demonstrates that a suitably autonomous robot can plan its own strategy
Recovering the stationary phase condition for accurately obtaining scattering and tunneling times
The stationary phase method is often employed for computing tunneling {\em
phase} times of analytically-continuous {\em gaussian} or infinite-bandwidth
step pulses which collide with a potential barrier. The indiscriminate
utilization of this method without considering the barrier boundary effects
leads to some misconceptions in the interpretation of the phase times. After
reexamining the above barrier diffusion problem where we notice the wave packet
collision necessarily leads to the possibility of multiple reflected and
transmitted wave packets, we study the phase times for tunneling/reflecting
particles in a framework where an idea of multiple wave packet decomposition is
recovered. To partially overcome the analytical incongruities which rise up
when tunneling phase time expressions are obtained, we present a theoretical
exercise involving a symmetrical collision between two identical wave packets
and a one dimensional squared potential barrier where the scattered wave
packets can be recomposed by summing the amplitudes of simultaneously reflected
and transmitted waves.Comment: 32 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Gravitational Wave Chirp Search: Economization of PN Matched Filter Bank via Cardinal Interpolation
The final inspiral phase in the evolution of a compact binary consisting of
black holes and/or neutron stars is among the most probable events that a
network of ground-based interferometric gravitational wave detectors is likely
to observe. Gravitational radiation emitted during this phase will have to be
dug out of noise by matched-filtering (correlating) the detector output with a
bank of several templates, making the computational resources required
quite demanding, though not formidable. We propose an interpolation method for
evaluating the correlation between template waveforms and the detector output
and show that the method is effective in substantially reducing the number of
templates required. Indeed, the number of templates needed could be a factor
smaller than required by the usual approach, when the minimal overlap
between the template bank and an arbitrary signal (the so-called {\it minimal
match}) is 0.97. The method is amenable to easy implementation, and the various
detector projects might benefit by adopting it to reduce the computational
costs of inspiraling neutron star and black hole binary search.Comment: scheduled for publicatin on Phys. Rev. D 6
LISA data analysis I: Doppler demodulation
The orbital motion of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) produces
amplitude, phase and frequency modulation of a gravitational wave signal. The
modulations have the effect of spreading a monochromatic gravitational wave
signal across a range of frequencies. The modulations encode useful information
about the source location and orientation, but they also have the deleterious
affect of spreading a signal across a wide bandwidth, thereby reducing the
strength of the signal relative to the instrument noise. We describe a simple
method for removing the dominant, Doppler, component of the signal modulation.
The demodulation reassembles the power from a monochromatic source into a
narrow spike, and provides a quick way to determine the sky locations and
frequencies of the brightest gravitational wave sources.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures. References and new comments adde
Hadamard Regularization
Motivated by the problem of the dynamics of point-particles in high
post-Newtonian (e.g. 3PN) approximations of general relativity, we consider a
certain class of functions which are smooth except at some isolated points
around which they admit a power-like singular expansion. We review the concepts
of (i) Hadamard ``partie finie'' of such functions at the location of singular
points, (ii) the partie finie of their divergent integral. We present and
investigate different expressions, useful in applications, for the latter
partie finie. To each singular function, we associate a partie-finie (Pf)
pseudo-function. The multiplication of pseudo-functions is defined by the
ordinary (pointwise) product. We construct a delta-pseudo-function on the class
of singular functions, which reduces to the usual notion of Dirac distribution
when applied on smooth functions with compact support. We introduce and analyse
a new derivative operator acting on pseudo-functions, and generalizing, in this
context, the Schwartz distributional derivative. This operator is uniquely
defined up to an arbitrary numerical constant. Time derivatives and partial
derivatives with respect to the singular points are also investigated. In the
course of the paper, all the formulas needed in the application to the physical
problem are derived.Comment: 50 pages, to appear in Journal of Mathematical Physic
Time-frequency detection of Gravitational Waves
We present a time-frequency method to detect gravitational wave signals in
interferometric data. This robust method can detect signals from poorly modeled
and unmodeled sources. We evaluate the method on simulated data containing
noise and signal components. The noise component approximates initial LIGO
interferometer noise. The signal components have the time and frequency
characteristics postulated by Flanagan and Hughes for binary black hole
coalescence. The signals correspond to binaries with total masses between to and with (optimal filter) signal-to-noise ratios of 7
to 12. The method is implementable in real time, and achieves a coincident
false alarm rate for two detectors 1 per 475 years. At this false
alarm rate, the single detector false dismissal rate for our signal model is as
low as 5.3% at an SNR of 10. We expect to obtain similar or better detection
rates with this method for any signal of similar power that satisfies certain
adiabaticity criteria. Because optimal filtering requires knowledge of the
signal waveform to high precision, we argue that this method is likely to
detect signals that are undetectable by optimal filtering, which is at present
the best developed detection method for transient sources of gravitational
waves.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, uses REVTE
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