Title: Gravitational Wave Sources: Changing Perspectives
1Gravitational Wave Sources Changing Perspectives
The KipFest
2 June 2000
California Institute of Technology
A Symposium on Kip Thornes 60th Birthday
- Bernard Schutz
- (PhD Kip 71)
- Albert Einstein Institute Max Planck Institute
for Gravitational Physics, Golm, Germany - and
- Department of Physics and Astronomy
- Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK
http//www.aei-potsdam.mpg.de schutz_at_aei-potsdam.
mpg.de
2Gravitational Wave Theory Ghosts and Illusions
for 40 Years
- Gravitational radiation posed fundamental
problems to theorists in GR for a remarkably long
time. Einstein repeatedly wavered about their
reality. - Early workers probably defeated themselves by
expecting too much a universal definition of the
energy in a wave, a proof of energy conservation,
a clean separation between physical and
coordinate effects. - These expectations, based on Maxwells equations,
could not be fulfilled. The equivalence principle
made localization impossible, and the
nonlinearity of GR made a strict separation of
waves from the background impossible too.
3Getting it Right in the 50s and 60s
- Real progress came when physicists accepted that
gravitational waves could only be cleanly defined
in certain asymptotic limits. Bondi demonstrated
energy balance far away, Penrose made this
visually accessible by defining null infinity,
Arnowitt-Deser-Misner showed how waves contribute
to mass measured far away, Isaacson showed how to
localize their energy gauge-invariantly within a
region the size of a wavelength (but not
smaller). - Gravitational radiation is no longer a ghost, but
it is not quite concrete either. It is the
dynamical essence of GR. Through nonlinearity,
gravitational waves can create mass,
singularities, even black holes. Most
interestingly, they carry information about what
Kip Thorne calls the dark side of the Universe.
4Physical Gravitational Waves
- Kip started his career just as the fog was
lifting, and gravitational radiation physics has
been a consistent interest. His PhD (1965) thesis
studied gauge-invariant conservation laws for
cylindrically-symmetric gravitational waves (the
C-energy). By 1969 he was calculating GW
amplitudes from pulsating neutron stars (Thorne
Campolattaro with algebraic computing!!) and
working with Burke on deriving the quadrupole
radiation reaction formula. He suggested I look
into pulsations of rotating stars. - There were still many open questions, but not
ones of reality. The most important was to
establish the correct way to calculate radiation
from self-gravitating systems, dealing with the
nonlinearity of GR satisfactorily. This was not
finally settled until the early 1980s by
Chandrasekhar, Damour, and many others. Extending
this post-Newtonian approximation to high order
is still an important area of work.
5The Importance of the Field h
- For gravitational wave detection, all one needs
is a calculation of h and of back-reaction in the
source. This can be done without worrying about
energy! - Direct approaches to calculating h had been
followed from the beginning, but were hampered by
the lack of a consistent post-Newtonian
approximation. - In the first decades of GR, nobody thought
gravitational waves (or black holes,
gravitational lensing, ) could be observed, so
most physicists ignored GR entirely. For example,
even Chandrasekhar decided not to go into
relativity in the early 50s because he feared it
would be the death of his career. - Reciprocally, what experimenter would take up the
challenge of building such a complex apparatus to
observe a radiation that many specialists doubted
was even real?
(Answer Weber!)
6The First Experiments
- Weber ignored the doubts of some theorists
because he had done the field/source calculations
himself, at least in linear theory, and he
believed the results. - He also knew his first detector would be far from
the required sensitivity, but he wanted to start.
He began building the first bar detector in 1960. - In retrospect, when he started he was probably
too optimistic about the technology of his day.
After investing a decade of effort, he allowed
himself to believe that he was seeing
gravitational waves at an amplitude and rate far
higher than he or anyone else had predicted. The
sad episode ended when other experiments failed
to confirm him, leaving Weber isolated. - But his claims stimulated many groups to build
detectors to check his results. Almost all of
todays big projects have grown from those
efforts to prove or disprove Weber.
7Early Source Calculations
- Webers claims stimulated theoreticians in the
late 1960s too. - Supernovae were believed to be the most likely
source of detectable radiation. Webers bar was
optimized for them. - But supernovae could not explain Webers claimed
observations, so many groups took up the
challenge. Kips group at Caltech collaborated
and competed with groups at Princeton, Maryland,
Chicago, and Austin, among others. Many groups in
Europe also began source calculations. It was an
exciting time! - Out of this excitement came some fundamental
advances (black hole dynamics/ thermodynamics/uniq
ueness, neutron star stability, and (later)
measurement below the quantum limit see talks
by Caves and Braginsky), some seminal
technologies (numerical relativity, the Teukolsky
equation, radiation reaction), and some false
hopes (gravitational synchrotron radiation).
8Early Developments at Low Frequencies
- In 1967 Braginsky and Gertsenshtein proposed
Doppler tracking of spacecraft for low-frequency
detection. Anderson (1971) did the first analysis
of tracking data. - The idea for interferometers in space came later,
from Weiss. (See later slide). - In the first application of GWs in astrophysics,
Faulkner (1971) proposed that GWs regulate orbits
of some cataclysmic variables. More and more
short-period binaries were discovered by X-ray
and UV observations. The number of known sources
was growing. - The identification of Cyg X-1 as a strong
black-hole candidate in the X-ray data of Uhuru
(launched 1970) made black holes more real,
making it easier for theorists to postulate that
QSOs were powered by massive black holes. (See
later slide.)
9The Gravitational Wave Sky in MTW (1973)
- Intense theoretical work had produced many
significant results, but no new realistic
sources! The conclusion that Weber was not seeing
gravitational waves vindicated this failure and
most people turned away from further source
calculations. - Supernovae were still regarded as the most
promising, but realistic limits on their
radiation amplitudes were discouraging. - Spinning neutron stars pulsars were also a
possibility, as unpredictable then as they remain
today. - The early Universe was recognized as a possible
source, but a good mechanism was not there
inflation and cosmic defects were in the future. - Bar detectors were the only practical technology.
MTW does not treat interferometers for
gravitational radiation. Source strength is
always measured in terms of energy, not
amplitude. Detectors are regarded as bolometers.
10We Have a Data Point!
- The discovery in 1974 of the Hulse-Taylor pulsar
PSR191316, and its subsequent intensive study by
Taylor, had important ramifications. - It stimulated theorists to clear up their
remaining confusions over the post-Newtonian
approximation. - It reassured us that GR is quantitatively correct
for gravitational waves, at least for this kind
of system. This was an important consideration
for approval of funding for large detectors 15-20
years later. - It led, within a few years, to the understanding
that similar systems coalescing in remote
galaxies are among the strongest predictable
sources observable from the ground. Clark and
Eardley provided the first key insights around
1978, but it was not until the later development
of interferometers that the importance of these
systems became clear.
11The Rise of Interferometers
- First proposed independently by Gertsenshtein
Pustovoit, Weber, and Weiss, the first was built
by Forward in 1972 at Hughes Aircraft. - By the end of the 1970s it was clear that the
quantum limit for bars was a serious one. Kip did
fundamental work on QND (see talks by Caves,
Braginsky), and this continues to be one of his
important research interests. But bars had an
obvious problem. - At the same time new technology had made laser
interferometers promising. Their broad bandwidth
and potentially large size made them attractive.
Better mirrors (developed for military air
navigation systems) allowed systems to reach
required power densities by using the
Drever-Schilling idea of power recycling. - Suddenly one could design 10-21 and 10-22
detectors that one believed one could actually
build. Groups at MIT, Glasgow, and Munich started
on this path.
12Detecting Gravitational Waves From Space
- Weiss proposed a space interferometer in 1976.
- Gravity-gradient noise makes the Earth an
impossible platform for observing below 1 Hz.
Fluctuations in the local tidal gravitational
field are larger than expected GW amplitudes.
They cannot be screened out, but they fall off as
1/r3 as one goes far away. - Bender Faller developed a feasible design for a
space interferometer, supported by NASA funding.
But it proved difficult to interest NASA (ie
space physicists) in a mission. - Why? Possibly because the field simply had no
profile. The development and funding of ground
interferometers and the general acceptance that
galaxies contain massive black holes would
eventually lift this blight.
13The Perspective at Batelle in 1978
- In 1978 Smarr organized a meeting on
gravitational radiation that contains the seeds
of the big changes that were about to occur
(Smarr 1979). - Weiss described interferometers and estimated
their sensitivity, remarkably close to present
ground and space targets. - Blandford clearly described the case for black
holes in galaxies and their possibilities for
gravitational radiation, but he pointed out that
there was much skepticism to overcome. He was
10-15 years ahead of his time! - Clark, in another far-sighted paper, made a
strong case for coalescing NS binaries, saying
that they were now the best sources, and that the
fact that they emit at low frequencies called
into question the design of current detectors
(bars). He only used energy considerations in
this argument.
14Matched Filtering Changing Data Analysis
- Interferometers were ideal for detecting
coalescing neutron-star binaries, whose spectrum
was broad and extended to low frequencies,
inaccessible to bars. But sensitivity estimates
at first were mainly based on the expected energy
in the waves. Bar groups had been doing a form of
filtering, but this was to remove the detector
transfer function nothing was known about the
source waveform apart from its estimated energy. - Some time around 1983/4, Kip seems to have been
the first in our field to grasp that matched
filtering would greatly improve the sensitivity
of interferometers to such sources as well as
lead to the extraction of much more information
from the signal. - I believe that this was the key theoretical
insight that led to todays large interferometer
projects. At last there was a nearly guaranteed
source that could be seen with a practical
detector. Funding agencies just had to give the
money!!
(Well, almost.)
15The Gravitational Wave Sky in 1987
- Kips definitive article in 300 Years of
Gravitation (Hawking Israel) and the 1987 NATO
meeting on data analysis (Schutz 1989) show the
consolidation of the transformation that was
already underway at Batelle. - Interferometers (first and second-generation,
ground and space-based) dominate the discussion. - Matched filtering is the basis of sensitivity
estimates and the extraction of information from
signals. - Supernovae are still at the 10-21 level
(optimistic assumptions). - Coalescing binaries are secure sources for
advanced detectors. - Massive black hole coalescences have high S/N
from space. - Wagoners (1984) mechanism for driving emission
from CFS-unstable modes of accreting neutron
stars is included. - Cosmological radiation is treated seriously and
extensively.
16After 1990 An Upsurge of Interest in GW Science
Publications per 2-year period
Search of SCI on keywords gravitational wave,
gravitational waves, gravitational-wave,
and gravitational radiation.
17Large Interferometers the 1st Generation
18The Joy of Starting
- The decade 1985-95 saw the founding of the first
big interferometer projects, with some false
starts. - Kip attracted Drever to Caltech from Glasgow,
then joined with Weiss to develop LIGO as a
Caltech-MIT collaboration. Kip (happily) stepped
aside when the management was centralized under
Vogt. Barish took over in 1994, and LIGO funding
began. - Glasgow, having failed to fund an all-British 1
km instrument in 1986, joined with the Garching
group and won approval in 1989 for GEO, a 3 km
instrument in Germany. Recession and
re-unification killed the project when funding
vanished a year later. Regrouping, GEO won
funding for its 600 m high-risk low-cost detector
in 1994. - VIRGO began in parallel with a joint proposal to
France and Italy. It has grown into a substantial
collaboration among research institutes of INFN
and CNRS.
19Worldwide Interferometer Network
20Progress in Sensitivity ?100 in 10-20 years is
possible
Under construction
Planned
Anticipated bounds, in design phase
21The High-Frequency Sky in 2000
- Since 1987 there have been further changes in our
expectations. - Coalescing neutron-star binaries may be
associated with gamma-ray bursts, and their event
rate may be lower than we thought at first. But
the binary black-hole coalescence rate may be
higher. - The modes underlying Wagoners proposal are
thought to be stable, but Bildsten (1998) has
revived the idea using temperature gradients to
provide the asymmetry. Cyg X-1 is promising. - r-modes have been found to be unstable by the CFS
mechanism and may provide another good source for
advanced detectors. (See talk by Owen.) NS mode
seismology can determine NS EOS (Andersson
Kokkotas). - COBE observations have given a target for the
cosmological background (very hard to reach) but
superstring-inspired cosmologies (Veneziano et
al) may generate more radiation.
22How Will We Recognize GWs?
- Building and operating detectors is the first
part of the story. After that comes the data
analysis. - Detection is always statistical in nature, never
100 certain. Matched filtering is the key, but
one must understand and believe the filters. - The first generation detectors must jointly
analyze their data to extract maximum
sensitivity. - LIGO and GEO are in detailed discussion about an
agreement for data exchange and joint
publication. - The first detection must be iron-clad.
I hope it will soon be time for data-analysts
to put themselves on the line and claim a
discovery!
23LISA
24The Low-Frequency Sky
- Bender brought his studies to Europe in 1993, and
the result was that ESA adopted LISA as a
Cornerstone mission in 1995. Interest in the USA
revived, and we now expect LISA to be a joint
ESA-NASA mission launched around 2010. - Massive black holes are now known to exist in
most external galaxies. Galaxy mergers are
common, so black hole mergers may be common too.
Small black holes falling into large ones could
provide stringent tests of GR. - There are so many binary star systems in the
Galaxy that they cannot be resolved at
frequencies below 1 mHz. Above that, LISA might
discover hundreds or thousands of new systems. - LISA will not reach the inflation bound on the
stochastic background, but a future space mission
targeted at one of two windows ( lt 1 ?Hz, 0.1-1.0
Hz) might be the best way to make this most
fundamental observation.
25More Work for Theorists
- Theorists have as much to do as experimentalists.
- Numerical relativity is needed to provide good
waveform predictions for BH-BH, BH-NS, NS-NS
mergers. The Lazarus mixed perturbation-simulation
approximation may yield first new results next
year (next slide). Full simulations, proceeding
in parallel, may also yield first results next
year. - To predict supernova radiation it will be
necessary to do full 3D gravitational collapse
simulations with neutrino transport. - Neutron stars could be important sources, and
theorists are working on r-modes and the Bildsten
mechanism. Details of NS physics are crucial to
making credible predictions. - We have to learn how to calculate
radiation-reaction on orbits around black holes
before we can devise filters for signals from
small black holes falling into large ones.
26Lazarus Project BH-Inspiral Calculations
By Baker, Brügmann, Campanelli, Lousto (AEI)
Misner BH collision as a test problem.
27Gravitational Wave Astronomy
- Gravitational waves are part of astronomy
already, but there will be more interaction in
the near future between astronomers and
gravitational wave observers and theorists. - Galaxy evolution ? black hole observations
- r-mode observations ? supernova studies, NS
physics - GWs from spinning NSs ? radio studies
- LISA advance warning of MBH coalescence ?
multi-waveband observations of the event - CMB observations ? stochastic background
- Up to now, most theoretical work on gravitational
radiation has been done by relativists. Future
observations will require a new breed of
phenomenologists, young physicists with a broad
grasp of astronomy, capable of making models and
interpreting data.
28Heres One!