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A High-Precision Test Bench for LISA Technology by Staff Writers Hannover, Germany (SPX) Mar 06, 2019
For the first time, it has been possible to test laser measurement technology for LISA in laboratories almost under mission conditions. A team of researchers led by the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics and the Institute for Gravitational Physics at Leibniz Universitat in Hannover, Germany, achieved the breakthrough with a novel experiment. The work ties up with the LISA Pathfinder mission, which tested LISA technologies in space from 2015 to 2017. LISA is a planned observatory in space that will detect gravitational waves inaccessible on Earth. A consortium of international scientists is currently developing LISA as a mission of the European Space Agency (ESA). With their experiment, the AEI scientists demonstrate the functionality of the LISA phasemeter, which will be the central measuring unit of the observatory. Their experiment can also be easily extended for further testing and can thus verify other steps of LISA measurements observatory. Their experiment can also be easily extended for further testing and can thus verify other steps of LISA measurements and support the development of data processing for the mission. "All components of the planned LISA space observatory must meet strict precision requirements to measure gravitational waves," says Dr. Thomas Schwarze, lead author of the article published in the renowned journal Physical Review Letters. "Creating conditions in a laboratory under which the enormous precision for LISA can be verified requires great care. For the first time, we can test an important part of LISA technology under almost realistic mission conditions in our laboratories and show that it works as intended."
LISA: A Gravitational-Wave Observatory in Space To detect these tiny changes, instruments (phasemeters) in the LISA satellites monitor and measure the laser light exchanged between them. This measurement has to be performed with highest precision - like an extremely accurate microphone with low noise and low distortion - over a large range of 8 to 10 orders of magnitude.
Testing LISA Measurements in a Laboratory The setup consists of an optical bench which, due to its special construction, is highly precise and stable and thus eliminates all undesirable noise sources ten times better than previous experiments. The required LISA accuracy in the trillionth of a meter range can thus be achieved. On the optical bench, three laser beams produced in a controlled manner are superimposed in pairs in order to obtain six new laser beams with precisely defined properties. By skillfully superimposing three of these mixed beams and measuring their properties with the phasemeter, its function can be precisely checked.
Successful Test Under Almost Realistic Mission Conditions "It's crucial to understand all the details of the LISA mission precisely and to test them in advance in the laboratory," explains Prof. Gerhard Heinzel, leader of the research group for space interferometry at AEI Hannover. "Only in this way can we be sure that the complex mission will work as planned. Once the satellites are in orbit around the Sun, we can no longer modify the hardware."
Future Gravitational-Wave Astronomy with LISA Between December 2015 and July 2017, the LISA Pathfinder mission demonstrated other LISA components in space and showed that they exceeded requirements throughout the LISA measurement band. ESA is currently conducting the Phase A system study with the international LISA consortium. A preliminary design of the space components is to be developed in preparation for the mission.
Research Report: "A Picometer-Stable Hexagonal Optical Bench to Verify LISA Phase Extraction Linearity and Precision,"
Australia Designs Local Infrastructure for World's Largest Telescope Sydney, Australia (SPX) Feb 26, 2019 A team of Australian engineers and scientists has designed the local infrastructure for the world's largest radio telescope - the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) - taking the billion-dollar global project one step closer to reality. The SKA will explore the universe in unprecedented detail, doing so hundreds of times faster than any current facility. Antennas will be located in both Australia and southern Africa. The SKA Infrastructure Australia consortium, led by CSIRO - Australia's national s ... read more
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