One of the most exciting
new developments in physics
is the imminent advent
of gravitational wave astronomy
- viewing the cosmos not
with light and its electromagnetic
brethern, but rather with
ripples of gravity, or
gravitational waves. Viewed
in this way, the universe
will reveal details that
cannot be observed by any
other means, and many of
its most enigmatic constituents,
such as black holes, will
be amongst the most visible
objects in the sky.
The Laser Interferometer
Space Antenna (
LISA)
is a proposed joint NASA/ESA
mission to observe gravitational
waves from a space-based
platform. The mission consists
of three identical spacecraft
located in an equilateral
triangle 5x10^6 km on a
side in a heliocentric
orbit. The spacecraft carry
the optical components
of a Michelson-Morley interferometer
which will measure the
passing of gravitational
waves of astrophysical
origin in the 10
-1
to 10
-4 Hz band.
Launch is currently planned
for 2011, with data gathering
to begin in 2012. NASA's
recognition of the technological
and scientific opportunities
presented by the LISA mission
is exemplified in their
selection of the Disturbance
Reduction System technology
as the Space Technology
7 project for the New Millennium
Program.
To reap the full benefit
of the scientific promise
LISA embodies requires
input from three different
areas of research:
astrophysics,
source
modeling and
data
analysis. Data analysts
rely on source modelers
and astrophysicists to
predict features of gravitational
wave signals that will
allow them to be extracted
from instrumental noise.
Source modelers rely on
astrophysicists and data
analysts to guide them
in modeling the sources
that are most likely to
be observed. Astrophysicists
use source modeling and
signals extracted by data
analysts (or the lack of
such signals) to refine
their astrophysical theories.
The proposed CGWA will
represent research expertise
in all three of these theoretical
disciplines, with a focus
on LISA research.