956 research outputs found
Gravitational wave astronomy - astronomy of the 21st century
An enigmatic prediction of Einstein's general theory of relativity is
gravitational waves. With the observed decay in the orbit of the Hulse-Taylor
binary pulsar agreeing within a fraction of a percent with the theoretically
computed decay from Einstein's theory, the existence of gravitational waves was
firmly established. Currently there is a worldwide effort to detect
gravitational waves with interferometric gravitational wave observatories or
detectors and several such detectors have been built or being built. The
initial detectors have reached their design sensitivities and now the effort is
on to construct advanced detectors which are expected to detect gravitational
waves from astrophysical sources. The era of gravitational wave astronomy has
arrived. This article describes the worldwide effort which includes the effort
on the Indian front - the IndIGO project -, the principle underlying
interferometric detectors both on ground and in space, the principal noise
sources that plague such detectors, the astrophysical sources of gravitational
waves that one expects to detect by these detectors and some glimpse of the
data analysis methods involved in extracting the very weak gravitational wave
signals from detector noise.Comment: The contents of this article were finalised few months ago. The
discussion in the article pertains to the situation prevailing at that tim
Time Delay Interferometry for LISA with one arm dysfunctional
In order to attain the requisite sensitivity for LISA - a joint space mission
of the ESA and NASA- the laser frequency noise must be suppressed below the
secondary noises such as the optical path noise, acceleration noise etc. By
combining six appropriately time-delayed data streams containing fractional
Doppler shifts - a technique called time delay interferometry (TDI) - the laser
frequency noise may be adequately suppressed. We consider the general model of
LISA where the armlengths vary with time, so that second generation TDI are
relevant. However, we must envisage the possibility, that not all the optical
links of LISA will be operating at all times, and therefore, we here consider
the case of LISA operating with two arms only. As shown earlier in the
literature, obtaining even approximate solutions of TDI to the general problem
is very difficult. Since here only four optical links are relevant, the
algebraic problem simplifies considerably. We are then able to exhibit a large
number of solutions (from mathematical point of view an infinite number) and
further present an algorithm to generate these solutions
Time-delay interferometry and the relativistic treatment of LISA optical links
In order to attain the requisite sensitivity for LISA - a joint space mission of the ESA and NASA- the laser frequency noise must be suppressed below the secondary noises such as the optical path noise, acceleration noise etc. By combining six appropriately time-delayed data streams containing fractional Doppler shifts - a technique called time delay interferometry (TDI) - the laser frequency noise may be adequately suppressed. Here we investigate the problem of TDI in the general case of unequal up-down links and also include the effect of the Earth on the spacecraft and the optical links. We show that there are symmetries in the physics which can be successfully used to simplify the algebra of the TDI. We finally give the example of the first generation modified Sagnac observable in which the laser frequency noise is suppressed because of the symmetries
The mathematical theory of resonant transducers in a spherical gravity wave antenna
The rigoruos mathematical theory of the coupling and response of a spherical
gravitational wave detector endowed with a set of resonant transducers is
presented and developed. A perturbative series in ascending powers of the
square root of the ratio of the resonator to the sphere mass is seen to be the
key to the solution of the problem. General layouts of arbitrary numbers of
transducers can be assessed, and a specific proposal (PHC), alternative to the
highly symmetric TIGA of Merkowitz and Johnson, is described in detail.
Frequency spectra of the coupled system are seen to be theoretically recovered
in full agreement with experimental determinations.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, LaTeX2e, \usepackage{graphicx,deleq
Data analysis techniques for gravitational wave observations
Astrophysical sources of gravitational waves fall broadly into three categories: (i) transient and bursts, (ii) periodic or continuous wave and (iii) stochastic. Each type of source requires a different type of data analysis strategy. In this talk various data analysis strategies will be reviewed. Optimal filtering is used for extracting binary inspirals; Fourier transforms over Doppler shifted time intervals are computed for long duration periodic sources; optimally weighted cross-correlations for stochastic background. Some recent schemes which efficiently search for in spirals will be described. The performance of some of these techniques on real data obtained will be discussed. Finally, some results on cancellation of systematic noises in laser interferometric space antenna (LISA) will be presented and future directions indicated
Searching for gravitational waves from rotating neutron stars
Rotating neutron stars are one of the important sources of gravitational waves (GW) for the ground based as well as space based detectors. Since the waves are emitted continuously, the source is termed as a continuous gravitational wave (CGW) source. The expected weakness of the signal requires long integration times (~year). The data analysis problem involves tracking the phase coherently over such large integration times, which makes it the most computationally intensive problem among all GW sources envisaged. In this article, the general problem of data analysis is discussed, and more so, in the context of searching for CGW sources orbiting another companion object. The problem is important because there are several pulsars, which could be deemed to be CGW sources orbiting another companion star. Differential geometric techniques for data analysis are described and used to obtain computational costs. These results are applied to known systems to assess whether such systems are detectable with current (or near future) computing resources
General relativistic treatment of LISA optical links
LISA is a joint space mission of the NASA and the ESA for detecting low
frequency gravitational waves in the band Hz. In order to attain
the requisite sensitivity for LISA, the laser frequency noise must be
suppressed below the other secondary noises such as the optical path noise,
acceleration noise etc. This is achieved by combining time-delayed data for
which precise knowledge of time-delays is required. The gravitational field,
mainly that of the Sun and the motion of LISA affect the time-delays and the
optical links. Further, the effect of the gravitational field of the Earth on
the orbits of spacecraft is included. This leads to additional flexing over and
above that of the Sun. We have written a numerical code which computes the
optical links, that is, the time-delays with great accuracy
metres - more than what is required for time delay interferometry (TDI) - for
most of the orbit and with sufficient accuracy within metres for an
integrated time window of about six days, when one of the arms tends to be
tangent to the orbit. Our analysis of the optical links is fully general
relativistic and the numerical code takes into account effects such as the
Sagnac, Shapiro delay, etc.. We show that with the deemed parameters in the
design of LISA, there are symmetries inherent in the configuration of LISA and
in the physics, which may be used effectively to suppress the residual laser
noise in the modified first generation TDI. We demonstrate our results for some
important TDI variables
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