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Gravitational Wave Detection
Introduction to Gravitational Wave Detection Ronald W. Hellings Montana State University PTA Workshop Penn State 7/20/05
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What is a gravitational wave?
space A 2-D analogy motion in this dimension is meaningless 2 free masses The masses track each other with lasers
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The gravitational wave is a wave of curvature
each slice is a section of an arc of constant radius
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As a gravitational wave passes through the space...
the free masses remain fixed at their coordinate points while the distance between them
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increases due to the extra space in the curvature wave.
The laser signal has to cover more distance and is delayed
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Why are gravitational waves called “a strain in space”?
points that are close have little space injected between them points that are further away have more space injected between them
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Quadrupole Gravitational Waves
a ring of free test masses h+ less space more space
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Quadrupole Gravitational Waves
a ring of free test masses h
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Let’s do the math
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Geometry elliptical polarization plane wave polarization angle
polarization angle plane wave propagation vector s pulsar Earth
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The Gravitational Wave Metric Tensor
e.g. choose the z-axis along and the x-axis so = 0. Then
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The path of the radio signal from the pulsar to the Earth is
a null path, so Approximate and integrate where
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hij is a wave, so reception occurs at t = t, x = 0 emission occurs at t = t s, so The change in distance is proportional to the integral of the wave amplitude.
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So let’s get an observable that is proportional to the wave
Gravitational waves are proportional to the time derivative of pulsar arrival time residuals. But... in the long wavelength limit (s<), and or LIGO Low band of LISA
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The Gravitational Wave Spectrum
Type Range Run Time Sources Instrument 10 Hz 1000 Hz compact stars bars, LIGOs HF one per day 0.1 Hz 10Hz one per a few days MAGGIE, lunar LIGO MF ? 10 mHz 10 mHz binaries SMBHs LF one per year LISA 1 nHz 10 mHz once in a lifetime cosmic astrophysics VLF PTA 10 nHz 0 Hz snapshots only cosmic structure COBE, MAP Planck, etc. ULF
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The Gravitational Wave Spectrum
Type Range Run Time Sources Instrument 10 Hz 1000 Hz compact stars bars, LIGOs HF Long wavelength limit one per day 0.1 Hz 10Hz one per a few days MAGGIE, lunar LIGO MF Long and short regimes ? 10 mHz 10 mHz binaries SMBHs LF Long and short regimes one per year LISA 1 nHz 10 mHz once in a lifetime cosmic astrophysics Short wavelength only VLF PTA 10 nHz 0 Hz snapshots only cosmic structure COBE, MAP Planck, etc. ULF
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The Pulsar Limit Every pulsar in every direction has correlated timing noise due to this term. This allows a weighted correlation analysis to optimally use data from multiple pulsars. ~1000 years now
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The correlated part of the timing noise
For the nth pulsar in the direction sn, this may be written (This generalizes the result of Hellings & Downs, 1983, which assumed plane-polarized gravitational waves.)
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The cross-correlation of data from 2 pulsars will produce
If are isotropic, and uncorrelated, then where But should be uncorrelated? IT DEPENDS ON THE SOURCE!
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Needs Calculation of for plane polarization done
Calculation of and for general polarization Thought on sources of stochastic gravitational background
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