Skip to main page content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

Https

The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

Access keys NCBI Homepage MyNCBI Homepage Main Content Main Navigation
Review
. 2013;16(1):7.
doi: 10.12942/lrr-2013-7. Epub 2013 Sep 12.

Testing General Relativity with Low-Frequency, Space-Based Gravitational-Wave Detectors

Affiliations
Review

Testing General Relativity with Low-Frequency, Space-Based Gravitational-Wave Detectors

Jonathan R Gair et al. Living Rev Relativ. 2013.

Abstract

We review the tests of general relativity that will become possible with space-based gravitational-wave detectors operating in the ∼ 10-5 - 1 Hz low-frequency band. The fundamental aspects of gravitation that can be tested include the presence of additional gravitational fields other than the metric; the number and tensorial nature of gravitational-wave polarization states; the velocity of propagation of gravitational waves; the binding energy and gravitational-wave radiation of binaries, and therefore the time evolution of binary inspirals; the strength and shape of the waves emitted from binary mergers and ringdowns; the true nature of astrophysical black holes; and much more. The strength of this science alone calls for the swift implementation of a space-based detector; the remarkable richness of astrophysics, astronomy, and cosmology in the low-frequency gravitational-wave band make the case even stronger.

Keywords: LISA; black holes; data analysis; eLISA; general relativity; gravitation; gravitational waves.

PubMed Disclaimer

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Time-Delay Interferometry (TDI). LISA-like detectors measure GWs by transmitting laser light between three spacecraft in triangular configuration, and comparing the optical phase of the incident lasers against reference lasers on each spacecraft. To avoid extreme requirements on laser-frequency stability over the course of the many seconds required for transmission around the triangle, data analysts will generate time-delayed linear combinations of the phase comparisons; the combinations simulate nearly equal-delay optical paths around the sides of the triangle, and (much like an equal-arm Michelson interferometer) they suppress laser frequency noise. Many such combinations, including those depicted here, are possible, but altogether they comprise at most three independent gravitational-wave observables. lmage reproduced by permission from [447], copyright by APS.
Figure 2
Figure 2
The discovery space for space-based GW detectors, covering the low-frequency region of the GW spectrum, 10−5 Hz ≲ f ≲ 0.1 Hz. The discovery space is delineated by the LISA threshold sensitivity curve [277] in black, and by the eLISA sensitivity curve in red [21] (the curves were produced using the online sensitivity curve and source plotting website [321]). This region is populated by a wealth of strong sources, often in large numbers, including mergers of MBHs, EMRls of stellar-scale compact objects into MBHs, and millions of close-orbiting binary systems in the galaxy. Thousands of the strongest signals from these galactic binary systems should be individually resolvable, while the combined signals of millions of them produce a stochastic background at low frequencies. These systems provide ample opportunities for astrophysical tests of GR for gravitational-field strengths that are not well characterized and studied in conventional astronomy.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Contours of constant SNR for MBH binaries observed with eLISA. The left-hand panel shows contours in the total-mass-redshift plane for equal-mass binaries, while the right-hand panel shows contours in the total-mass-mass-ratio plane for sources at redshift z = 4. Image reproduced by permission from [21].
Figure 4
Figure 4
Effect of the six possible GW polarization modes on a ring of test particles. The GW propagates in the z-direction for the upper three transverse modes, and in the x-direction for the lower three longitudinal modes. Only modes (a) and (b) are possible in GR. Image reproduced by permission from [471].
Figure 5
Figure 5
Estimating all the binary-inspiral phasing coefficients ψk of Eq. (51) yields differently shaped regions in the m1m2 plane, which must intersect near true mass values if GR is correct. Image reproduced by permission from [27], copyright by APS.
Figure 6
Figure 6
Constraints on phasing corrections in the ppE framework, as determined from LISA observations of ∼ 106 M massive-black-hole inspirals at z = 1 and z = 3. The figure also includes the β bounds derived from pulsar PSR J0737-3039 [492], the solar-system bound on the graviton mass [435], and PN-coefficient bounds derived as described Section 5.2.1. The spike at b = 0 corresponds to the degeneracy between the ppE correction and the initial GW-phase parameter. (Adapted from [134].)
Figure 7
Figure 7
Poincaré map for a regular orbit (left panel) and a chaotic orbit (right panel) in the Manko-Novikov spacetime. Image reproduced by permission from [195], copyright by APS.
Figure 8
Figure 8
Comparative SNRs, as a function of redshifted black-hole mass (1 + z)M, for the last year of inspiral of an equal-mass MBH binary and for the ringdown after the merger of the system. The method used to generate this figure follows that of [182], updated to use a modern LISA sensitivity curve [277] with a low-frequency cutoff of f = 1 × 10−4 Hz. The redshift is set to z = 1, at which the luminosity distance is DL = 6.6 Gpc using WMAP 7-year parameters [271].

Similar articles

Cited by

References

    1. Abadie J, LIGO Scientific Collaboration. Virgo Collaboration et al. Predictions for the rates of compact binary coalescences observable by ground-based gravitational-wave detectors. Class. Quantum Grav. 2010;27:173001. doi: 10.1088/0264-9381/27/17/173001. - DOI
    1. Acernese F, Virgo Collaboration et al. Advanced Virgo Baseline Design. Cascina: Virgo; 2009.
    1. Adelberger EG, Heckel BR, Nelson AE. Tests of the Gravitational Inverse-Square Law. Annu. Rev. Nucl. Part. Sci. 2003;53:77–121. doi: 10.1146/annurev.nucl.53.041002.110503. - DOI
    1. Ajith P, et al. Template bank for gravitational waveforms from coalescing binary black holes: Nonspinning binaries. Phys. Rev. D. 2008;77:104017. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevD.77.104017. - DOI
    1. Ajith P, et al. Inspiral-Merger-Ringdown Waveforms for Black-Hole Binaries with Nonprecessing Spins. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2011;106:241101. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.241101. - DOI - PubMed

LinkOut - more resources