Title: Gravitational Wave Astrophysics, Compact Binaries, and Numerical Relativity
1Gravitational Wave Astrophysics, Compact
Binaries, and Numerical
Relativity
- Joan Centrella
- Gravitational Astrophysics Laboratory
- NASA/GSFC
Numerical Relativity 2005 Compact Binaries
November 2 4 , 2005
2Most of the information we have about the
Universe so far has come to us in the form of . .
.
- Electromagnetic radiation
- Visible light naked eye observations,optical
telescopes - Full electromagnetic spectrum radio, IR, UV,
visible, X-rays, Gamma-rays - Particle nuclear astrophysics, neutrinos,
cosmic rays
These cosmic messengers provide a wealth of
information, making astronomy one of the crowning
glories of 20th century science.
3A Different Type of Astronomical
MessengerGravitational Waves . . .
- Hulse-Taylor binary pulsar PSR 191316
- Orbital period decay agrees with GR to within the
obs errors of lt 1 - Nobel Prize 1993
- ripples in spacetime curvature
- travel at velocity v c
- generated by matter distributions w/
time-changing quadrupole moments - ? carry info about bulk motion
of sources - transverse ? act normal to propagation direction
- 2 polarization states, h and hx
- interact weakly with matter
- ? carry info about deep, hidden regions in the
universe
4Amplitudes of Gravitational Wave Sources . . .
- Characteristic amplitude
- r distance to source
- RSch 2GM/c2
- Q (trace-free) quadrupole moment of source
- v characteristic nonspherical velocity
in source
- Estimate upper limits
- 1.4 MSun NS at
- r 15 kpc, h 10-17
- r 15 Mpc, h 10-20
- r 200 Mpc, h 10-21
- r 3000 Mpc, h 10-22
- 4 x 106 Msun MBH at
- r 3000 Mpc, h 10-16
- Strongest sources have
- large masses moving
- with velocities v c
5Detecting gravitational waves. . .
- Resonant mass detectors, laser interferometers
- Detector of length scale L
- A passing gravitational wave causes distortion of
detector that produces a strain amplitude h(t)
?L/L - Source waveforms scale as h(t) 1/r
(graphic courtesy of B. Barish, LIGO-Caltech)
6Estimating Gravitational Wave frequencies . . .
- Binary orbital frequency
-
- M M1 M2, M1 M2
- a separation
- NS/NS, a 10 R
- fGW 200 Hz
- BH/BH, a 10 M
- fGW 100 Hz
- MBH/MBH, a 10 M
- fGW 3 x 10-4 Hz
- Natural frequency
- 1.4 MSun NS, R 10 km
- fo 2 kHz
- 10 MSun BH
- fo 1 kHz
- 4 x 106 MSun MBH
- fo 3 mHz
7Ground-based interferometers . . .
- detect high frequency GW
-
- broad band
- kilometer-scale arms
- Current projects
- LIGO Hanford, WA, and Livingston, LA L 4
km - VIRGO France/Italy, near
Pisa L 3 km - GEO600 Germany/Britain, Hanover L 600 m
- Typical sources NS/NS, NS/BH, BH/BH, stellar
collapse, LMXBs...
8(No Transcript)
9 10- Significant progress in ground-based GW
detectors.... - LIGO
- has a set of running detectors
- data analysis process has matured
- the main initial LIGO science run S5
- to take 1 full year of integrated data
- set to begin later this year
- reorganization of LIGO lab and LSC into a single
LIGO - Advanced LIGO upgrade
- showing good technical progress
- optimistic about starting funding from NSF in
2008 - VIRGO, GEO600
- also progressing
- ? the age of GW observations is beginning in
earnest!
11LISA Laser Interferometric Space Antenna
- NASA/ESA collaboration
- detect low frequency GW
- 3 spacecraft
- equilateral triangle
- orbits Sun at 1 AU
- 20o behind Earth in its orbit
- arm length L 5 x 106 km
- optical transponders receive and re-transmit
phase locked light - launch 2015
- Typical sources MBH/MBH, Galactic compact
binaries, NS/MBH, BH/MBH
12Recent LISA Accomplishments
- The LISA Project has been in the Formulation
Phase one year. - ESA has engaged a contractor for formulation
studies. The Architecture Definition Phase of
that contract is complete. - The LISA Project team has mapped out 35 design
studies, 13 are done, 5 are ongoing, and the rest
to be finished by Apr. 06. - LISA Pathfinders major milestone, the
Preliminary Design Review, is nearly complete.
ESAs LISA Test Package has built and tested
engineering models. NASAs ST-7 has built and
tested engineering models. - Ground-based technology development is
progressing on microthrusters, phasemeter,
lasers, etc. - LISA data analysis planning has started both in
the U.S. and Europe.
13Gravitational Reference Sensor
Engineering model of the gravitational reference
sensor for LISA Pathfinder
14Interferometry
Engineering model of the interferometer for LISA
Pathfinder
15LISA / LIGO Relationship
- Complementary observations, different frequency
bands - Different astrophysical sources
16Astrophysical black holes....
- Black holes are formed throughout the universe as
the extreme end states of collapse, accretion,
mergers.... - There is good evidence for BHs in 3 mass ranges
- massive black holes (MBHs) M 105 Msun
- intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs) 102 Msun
M 104 Msun - stellar black holes M 102 Msun
- BHs are powerful cosmic engines, heating and
accelerating gas and particles to produce
impressive displays of electromagnetic energy... - When occuring in a binary, BHs are also
prodigious sources of gravitational waves....
17Massive Black Holes...first found in active
galaxies..
- M87 giant elliptical galaxy with jet
- Cyg-A radio source jet extends
7 x 105 ly
VLA(top left), HST (top right), VLBI (bottom)
(NASA,NRAO/NSF,STScI/JHU, AUI)
optical (AURA/NRAO/NSF)
(NRAO/AUI)
18Massive Black Holes....
- Good evidence for massive dark objects with
masses 106 Msun lt M lt
1010 Msun at centers of few dozen galaxies - Based on dynamical models, the case for these
massive dark objects being MBHs is tight for 3
galaxies... - MBH masses correlate with bulge luminosity (left)
and velocity dispersion (right)
(Ferrarase Ford 2005) - MBH s4 5
- LISA observations of GW from compact objects
inspiralling into these objects can falsify the
hypothesis that they are actually Kerr BHs
19MBH/MBH binaries.
- MBHs at the centers of most, if not all, galaxies
- Most galaxies undergo at least one merger
- ? MBH binaries
- Coalescence of MBH binary depends on stellar
effects, gas, feedback.... - Chandra X-ray observatory found the first known
system of 2 MBH starting to merge in the galaxy
NGC 6240 - distance 120 Mpc ? close!
- BHs will merge in few x 108 yrs
- LISA could observe several tens per year, out
to redshifts z gt 5 or more
20Evidence for MBH mergers....
- Jets emanating from centers of active galaxies
- believed to result from accretion onto central
MBH - jet directed along spin axis
- Mergers of spinning BHs can change orientation of
BH spin axis - ? sudden flip in jet direction
- X-type radio sources may be
signature
of MBH merger
(Image courtesy of NRAO/AUI Inset STScI)
(Merritt Ekers, Science, 2002)
21IMBHs....X-ray sources in dense stellar clusters
- M82 active star-forming galaxy ?
- many young, dense stellar clusters luminous
X-ray sources (ULXs) - associate cluster MGG 1 w/ ULX M82 X-1 (near
center of image) - Identify this w/ IMBH of mass M 350 Msun
(Portegies Zwart, et al)
- M74 Optical image w/ Chandra X-ray image
overlaid - Sc spiral galaxy with ULX
- ULX is IMBH candidate
(Optical NOAO/AURA/NSF/T.Boroson X-ray
NASA/CXC/U. of Michigan/J.Liu et al.)
22IMBH/IMBH binaries.
- IMBHs can form in dense stellar clusters (Miller,
Freitag,...) - stellar dynamics
- collisions
- core collapse of cluster
- runaway ? form IMBH
- Can gt 1 IMBH form in a stellar cluster?
- recent simulations by John Fregeau and
collaborators find multiple sites for runaway to
occur in clusters - ? multiple IMBHs form, with comparable masses
m1/m2 lt 10 - LISA could see as many as several inspirals per
year, for masses in the range M few x 100 Msun
103 Msun - Advanced LIGO could see binaries with masses in
the range M (10s 100s)Msun
23Stellar Black Holes.
- Form as the end result of massive star evolution
- Type II supernova
- collapse of iron core in highly evolved massive
star - outer regions blasted away in supernova explosion
- core collapses to BH if mass of remnant core M gt
3 Msun (maximum mass of NS) - Evidence for BH strongest in low mass X-ray
binaries (LMXBs) - interacting binary systems with compact object
and companion star - accretion of material from companion onto compact
object ? X-rays - in 17 cases, compact object has
mass M
gt 3 Msun ? BH (Orosz) - BH/BH binary
- forms if companion evolves to BH w/out
disrupting binary - no gas ? no EM emission
- but...detectable by GWs
- Source for ground based detectors....
(Ihle 2004)
24Final coalescence of BH binary proceeds in 3
stages . . .
- GW produced in all three phases of this evolution
. . . - Waveforms and dynamics scale with BH masses and
spins - ? source modeling applicable to
- stellar BHs, IMBHs MBHs.
strong-field spacetime dynamics, spin flips and
couplings
measure masses and spins of binary BHs
detect normal modes of ringdown to identify final
Kerr BH
(graphic courtesy of Kip Thorne)
25Focus on the merger stage
- Inspiral lasts until last stable orbit (LSO)
...then BHs leave quasi-static orbits
and plunge together - Need to evolve BH binary for few orbits near
the LSO at the end of the inspiral,
through merger and ringdownand extract the GW
signature - Expect several cycles of gravitational
radiation from merger - burst waveform, observable by LISA for
minutes hours - Strong, highly nonlinear, dynamical gravitational
fields - Importance of astrophysical initial data...
- Requires numerical solution of full Einstein eqs
in 3-D time - Merger can be phenomenologically rich
- effects of spin spin-spin and spin-orbit
couplings, spin flips - test of GR in the dynamical, nonlinear regime
- possible ejection of final BH for M1 ? M2 ?
astrophysics
26What powers short Gamma-ray bursts?
- Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) come in 2 types long (gt
2 sec) and short - The burst is followed by a fainter, longer lived
afterglow - By observing their afterglows, long GRBs are
associated with the collapse of young, massive
stellar cores - Recent observations by HETE Swift allowed fast
and precise localization of X-ray afterglows of
some short GRBs - Left GRB 050509b observed by Swifts ?-ray
(blue) X-ray (red) instruments - Right GRB 050724 observed by Swifts X-ray
telescope (red) and the small circles and crosses
are from optical, X-ray (Chandra) and radio
observations
27Short GRBS....NS/NS and NS/BH mergers?
- These observations of short GRBs are consistent
with models of NS/NS or NS/BH mergers - Such events would also produce GWs that could be
detectable by ground-based detectors such as LIGO - Can tell us about the populations of such
compact binaries, and the GRB mechanisms - Will look for coincidences between Swift and
HETE events and possible GW signals during the
upcoming S5 science run
(Nature)
28Gravitational Waves . . . a new kind of cosmic
messenger
- Every time you build new tools to see the
universe, new universes are discovered. Through
the ages, we see the power of penetrating into
space. -
-- David H. DeVorkin (paraphrasing Sir William
Herschel)
29(No Transcript)