Angular resolution of the LISA gravitational wave detector
- 15 June 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 57 (12) , 7089-7102
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.57.7089
Abstract
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 formulas 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.
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