36 research outputs found
Pulsar timing and gravitational waves
In the last few years, several researchers have used timing data from pulsars to search for ultra-low frequency (ULF) gravitational waves (waves at periods from a few days to a few years), especially for the waves making up the stochastic cosmic background such waves. How these limits are obtained are discussed and several precautions are pointed out that must be taken in the analysis of these data
Icarus lander
Icarus is one of the earth-crossing asteroids. It has a semi-major axis of 1.078 AU, giving it a period of 1.12 years, and an eccentricity of 0.827. The perihelion distance is thus 0.187 AU. The inclination of Icarus's orbit is 23 deg. Although it is a small body, it is still massive enough to be essentially immune to non-gravitational forces. These orbital and physical qualities make it an attractive target for testing General Relativity. The close passage to the sun means that it will be subject to a large relativistic perihelion precession; the high eccentricity makes the precession easy to measure; the high inclination allows the solar quadrupole moment (J sub 2) to be simultaneously determined via the nodal precession it predicts. The degeneracy between the relativistic effect and the effect of J sub 2 in the perihelion precession may thus be broken. Results are presented from a preliminary study of a possible trajectory design for an Icarus lander and from a covariance study of the scientific return to be expected from such a mission
Elimination of Clock Jitter Noise in Spaceborn Laser Interferometers
Space gravitational wave detectors employing laser interferometry between
free-flying spacecraft differ in many ways from their laboratory counterparts.
Among these differences is the fact that, in space, the end-masses will be
moving relative to each other. This creates a problem by inducing a Doppler
shift between the incoming and outgoing frequencies. The resulting beat
frequency is so high that its phase cannot be read to sufficient accuracy when
referenced to state-of-the-art space-qualified clocks. This is the problem that
is addressed in this paper. We introduce a set of time-domain algorithms in
which the effects of clock jitter are exactly canceled. The method employs the
two-color laser approach that has been previously proposed, but avoids the
singularities that arise in the previous frequency-domain algorithms. In
addition, several practical aspects of the laser and clock noise cancellation
schemes are addressed.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Relativistic Gravitational Experiments in Space
The results are summarized of a workshop on future gravitational physics space missions. The purpose of the workshop was to define generic technological requirements for such missions. NASA will use the results to direct its program of advanced technology development
Unequal arm space-borne gravitational wave detectors
Unlike ground-based interferometric gravitational wave detectors, large
space-based systems will not be rigid structures. When the end-stations of the
laser interferometer are freely flying spacecraft, the armlengths will change
due to variations in the spacecraft positions along their orbital trajectories,
so the precise equality of the arms that is required in a laboratory
interferometer to cancel laser phase noise is not possible. However, using a
method discovered by Tinto and Armstrong, a signal can be constructed in which
laser phase noise exactly cancels out, even in an unequal arm interferometer.
We examine the case where the ratio of the armlengths is a variable parameter,
and compute the averaged gravitational wave transfer function as a function of
that parameter. Example sensitivity curve calculations are presented for the
expected design parameters of the proposed LISA interferometer, comparing it to
a similar instrument with one arm shortened by a factor of 100, showing how the
ratio of the armlengths will affect the overall sensitivity of the instrument.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, REVTeX
Slice & Dice: Identifying and Removing Bright Galactic Binaries from LISA Data
Here we describe a hierarchal and iterative data analysis algorithm used for
searching, characterizing, and removing bright, monochromatic binaries from the
Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) data streams. The algorithm uses the
F-statistic to provide an initial solution for individual bright sources,
followed by an iterative least squares fitting for all the bright sources.
Using the above algorithm, referred to as Slice & Dice, we demonstrate the
removal of multiple, correlated galactic binaries from simulated LISA data.
Initial results indicate that Slice & Dice may be a useful tool for analyzing
the forthcoming LISA data.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, proceedings paper for the Sixth International
LISA Symposiu
The Effects of Orbital Motion on LISA Time Delay Interferometry
In an effort to eliminate laser phase noise in laser interferometer
spaceborne gravitational wave detectors, several combinations of signals have
been found that allow the laser noise to be canceled out while gravitational
wave signals remain. This process is called time delay interferometry (TDI). In
the papers that defined the TDI variables, their performance was evaluated in
the limit that the gravitational wave detector is fixed in space. However, the
performance depends on certain symmetries in the armlengths that are available
if the detector is fixed in space, but that will be broken in the actual
rotating and flexing configuration produced by the LISA orbits. In this paper
we investigate the performance of these TDI variables for the real LISA orbits.
First, addressing the effects of rotation, we verify Daniel Shaddock's result
that the Sagnac variables will not cancel out the laser phase noise, and we
also find the same result for the symmetric Sagnac variable. The loss of the
latter variable would be particularly unfortunate since this variable also
cancels out gravitational wave signal, allowing instrument noise in the
detector to be isolated and measured. Fortunately, we have found a set of more
complicated TDI variables, which we call Delta-Sagnac variables, one of which
accomplishes the same goal as the symmetric Sagnac variable to good accuracy.
Finally, however, as we investigate the effects of the flexing of the detector
arms due to non-circular orbital motion, we show that all variables, including
the interferometer variables, which survive the rotation-induced loss of
direction symmetry, will not completely cancel laser phase noise when the
armlengths are changing with time. This unavoidable problem will place a
stringent requirement on laser stability of 5 Hz per root Hz.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Data Processing for LISA's Laser Interferometer Tracking System (LITS)
The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, we will present recent results
on the data processing for LISA, including algorithms for elimination of clock
jitter noise and discussion of the generation of the data averages that will
eventually need to be telemetered to the ground. Second, we will argue, based
partly on these results, that a laser interferometer tracking system (LITS)
that employs independent lasers in each spacecraft is preferable for reasons of
simplicity to that in which the lasers in two of the spacecraft are locked to
the incoming beam from the third.Comment: 5 pages, Proceedings of the Third LISA Symposium (Golm, Germany,
2000
LISA data analysis: The monochromatic binary detection and initial guess problems
We consider the detection and initial guess problems for the LISA
gravitational wave detector. The detection problem is the problem of how to
determine if there is a signal present in instrumental data and how to identify
it. Because of the Doppler and plane-precession spreading of the spectral power
of the LISA signal, the usual power spectrum approach to detection will have
difficulty identifying sources. A better method must be found. The initial
guess problem involves how to generate {\it a priori} values for the parameters
of a parameter-estimation problem that are close enough to the final values for
a linear least-squares estimator to converge to the correct result. A useful
approach to simultaneously solving the detection and initial guess problems for
LISA is to divide the sky into many pixels and to demodulate the Doppler
spreading for each set of pixel coordinates. The demodulated power spectra may
then be searched for spectral features. We demonstrate that the procedure works
well as a first step in the search for gravitational waves from monochromatic
binaries.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure