10,178 research outputs found
LISA For Cosmologists: Calculating The Signal-To-Noise Ratio For Stochastic And Deterministic Sources
We present the steps to forecast the sensitivity of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) to both a stochastic gravitational wave background and deterministic wave sources. We show how to use these expressions to estimate the precision with which LISA can determine parameters associated with these sources. Tools are included to enable easy calculation of the signal-to-noise ratio and draw sensitivity curves. Benchmark values are given for easy comparison and checking of methods in the case of three worked examples. The first benchmark is the threshold stochastic gravitational wave background ΩGWh2 that LISA can observe. The second is the signal-to-noise ratio that LISA would observe for a binary black hole system identical to GW150914, radiating four years before merger. The third is the case of a monotone source, such as a binary that is far from merger
LISA For Cosmologists: Calculating The Signal-To-Noise Ratio For Stochastic And Deterministic Sources
We present the steps to forecast the sensitivity of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) to both a stochastic gravitational wave background and deterministic wave sources. We show how to use these expressions to estimate the precision with which LISA can determine parameters associated with these sources. Tools are included to enable easy calculation of the signal-to-noise ratio and draw sensitivity curves. Benchmark values are given for easy comparison and checking of methods in the case of three worked examples. The first benchmark is the threshold stochastic gravitational wave background ΩGWh2 that LISA can observe. The second is the signal-to-noise ratio that LISA would observe for a binary black hole system identical to GW150914, radiating four years before merger. The third is the case of a monotone source, such as a binary that is far from merger
On big rip singularities
In this comment we discuss big rip singularities occurring in typical phantom
models by violation of the weak energy condition. After that, we compare them
with future late-time singularities arising in models where the scale factor
ends in a constant value and there is no violation of the strong energy
condition. In phantom models the equation of state is well defined along the
whole evolution, even at the big rip. However, both the pressure and the energy
density of the phantom field diverge. In contrast, in the second kind of model
the equation of state is not defined at the big rip because the pressure bursts
at a finite value of the energy density.Comment: 8 page
Using a Primordial Gravitational Wave Background to Illuminate New Physics
A primordial spectrum of gravitational waves serves as a backlight to the
relativistic degrees of freedom of the cosmological fluid. Any change in the
particle physics content, due to a change of phase or freeze-out of a species,
will leave a characteristic imprint on an otherwise featureless primordial
spectrum of gravitational waves and indicate its early-Universe provenance. We
show that a gravitational wave detector such as the Laser Interferometer Space
Antenna would be sensitive to physics near 100 TeV in the presence of a
sufficiently strong primordial spectrum. Such a detection could complement
searches at newly proposed 100 km circumference accelerators such as the Future
Circular Collider at CERN and the Super Proton-Proton Collider in China,
thereby providing insight into a host of beyond Standard Model issues,
including the hierarchy problem, dark matter, and baryogenesis.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; added reference
Experiment to evaluate feasibility of utilizing Skylab-EREP remote sensing data for tectonic analysis of the Bighorn Mountains region, Wyoming-Montana
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Freezing Out Early Dark Energy
A phenomenological model of dark energy that tracks the baryonic and cold
dark matter at early times but resembles a cosmological constant at late times
is explored. In the transition between these two regimes, the dark energy
density drops rapidly as if it were a relic species that freezes out, during
which time the equation of state peaks at +1. Such an adjustment in the dark
energy density, as it shifts from scaling to potential-domination, could be the
signature of a trigger mechanism that helps explain the late-time cosmic
acceleration. We show that the non-negligible dark energy density at early
times, and the subsequent peak in the equation of state at the transition,
leave an imprint on the cosmic microwave background anisotropy pattern and the
rate of growth of large scale structure. The model introduces two new
parameters, consisting of the present-day equation of state and the redshift of
the freeze-out transition. A Monte Carlo Markov Chain analysis of a
ten-dimensional parameter space is performed to compare the model with
pre-Planck cosmic microwave background, large scale structure and supernova
data and measurements of the Hubble constant. We find that the transition
described by this model could have taken place as late as a redshift z~400. We
explore the capability of future cosmic microwave background and weak lensing
experiments to put tighter constraints on this model. The viability of this
model may suggest new directions in dark-energy model building that address the
coincidence problem.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figure
High resolution, low temperature photoabsorption cross-section of C2H2 with application to Saturn's atmosphere
New laboratory observations of the VUV absorption cross-section of C2H2, obtained under physical conditions approximating stratospheres of the giant planets, were combined with IUE observations of the albedo of Saturn, for which improved data reduction techniques have been used, to produce new models for that atmosphere. When the effects of C2H2 absorption are accounted for, additional absorption by other molecules is required. The best-fitting model also includes absorption by PH3, H2O, C2H6 and CH4. A small residual disagreement near 1600 A suggests that an additional trace species may be required to complete the model
Sensitivity To A Frequency-Dependent Circular Polarization In An Isotropic Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background
We calculate the sensitivity to a circular polarization of an isotropic stochastic gravitational wave background (ISGWB) as a function of frequency for ground- and space-based interferometers and observations of the cosmic microwave background. The origin of a circularly polarized ISGWB may be due to exotic primordial physics (i.e., parity violation in the early universe) and may be strongly frequency dependent. We present calculations within a coherent framework which clarifies the basic requirements for sensitivity to circular polarization, in distinction from previous work which focused on each of these techniques separately. We find that the addition of an interferometer with the sensitivity of the Einstein Telescope in the southern hemisphere improves the sensitivity of the ground-based network to circular polarization by about a factor of two. The sensitivity curves presented in this paper make clear that the wide range in frequencies of current and planned observations (10−18  Hz≲f≲100  Hz) will be critical to determining the physics that underlies any positive detection of circular polarization in the ISGWB. We also identify a desert in circular polarization sensitivity for frequencies between 10−15  Hz≲f≲10−3  Hz, given the inability for pulsar timing arrays and indirect-detection methods to distinguish the gravitational wave polarization
Sensitivity To A Frequency-Dependent Circular Polarization In An Isotropic Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background
We calculate the sensitivity to a circular polarization of an isotropic stochastic gravitational wave background (ISGWB) as a function of frequency for ground- and space-based interferometers and observations of the cosmic microwave background. The origin of a circularly polarized ISGWB may be due to exotic primordial physics (i.e., parity violation in the early universe) and may be strongly frequency dependent. We present calculations within a coherent framework which clarifies the basic requirements for sensitivity to circular polarization, in distinction from previous work which focused on each of these techniques separately. We find that the addition of an interferometer with the sensitivity of the Einstein Telescope in the southern hemisphere improves the sensitivity of the ground-based network to circular polarization by about a factor of two. The sensitivity curves presented in this paper make clear that the wide range in frequencies of current and planned observations (10−18  Hz≲f≲100  Hz) will be critical to determining the physics that underlies any positive detection of circular polarization in the ISGWB. We also identify a desert in circular polarization sensitivity for frequencies between 10−15  Hz≲f≲10−3  Hz, given the inability for pulsar timing arrays and indirect-detection methods to distinguish the gravitational wave polarization
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