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Spying on Black-Hole Eating Habits with LISA
13 January 2005—As big fish
eat little fish in the Earth's vast oceans, so too do supermassive
black holes gorge on smaller black holes and neutron stars, making
themselves more massive in the process. Using sophisticated computer
modeling, Penn State scientists have calculated the rate of this
black-hole snacking, called "extreme-mass-ratio inspirals." They
expect to see several events per year with the Laser
Interferometer Space Antennae (LISA), a joint NASA - European
Space Agency mission
now in development.
Steinn Sigurdsson, associate professor of astronomy
and astrophysics at Penn State, discusses the inspiral rate today
during a presentation at the American
Astronomical Society meeting
in San Diego. These events will be a major source of gravitational
waves, which are ripples in spacetime. Sigurdsson said that this
type of black hole inspiral provides one of the cleanest tests
for assessing Einstein's theory of general relativity.
"Most galaxies contain a supermassive black hole, and from
time to time a smaller black hole or neutron star will fall in," said
Sigurdsson. "Very little light, if any, is emitted. This is
done in the dark. Our best chance of studying the process is through
gravitational radiation."
Predicted by Einstein, gravitational radiation has not yet been
detected directly. These waves travel at light speed. Yet, unlike
light waves, the subtle gravitational waves hardly interact with
matter. A passing wave causes all matter to bob, like buoys on
the ocean. LISA works by setting out three spacecraft -- buoys
in spacetime -- and measuring the change in their separation as
they bob in response to passing gravitational waves. The three
LISA spacecraft will be separated from each other by over 3 million
miles, while the gravitational waves alter the distance between
them by far less than the width of an atom.
These waves, Sigurdsson said, grow more intense in the weeks just
before the larger black hole consumes the smaller object. That
is when LISA could detect an imminent merger. Higher-mass objects
falling into the black hole might produce detectable waves years
in advance of the merger. Sigurdsson puts the inspiral rate at
about 1 per million years per galaxy. Because there are millions
of galaxies in the visible universe, LISA might detect several
inspirals each year.
Extreme-mass-ratio inspirals involve what scientists call compact
objects -- stellar-size black holes, neutron stars, or white dwarfs.
Supermassive black holes also can swallow stars like our Sun. But
these stars get ripped apart first, and they do not produce detectable
gravitational waves.
Compact objects are dense. Neutron stars, for example, contain
the densest material found in nature. As a result, they act like
trace particles falling into a black hole, a perfect physics experiment.
This is a clean merger without splintering. So, the mergers serve
as very precise tests for Einstein's theory of general relativity.
Any discrepancy between observation and theory would point to a
flaw in general relativity.
LISA's lasers will measure tiny changes caused by passing waves
in the motion of freely falling test masses in each spacecraft
at a sub-nanometer accuracy. Technology to detect such subtle changes
is now in development at several institutes, including Penn State.
An ESA-led "LISA-Pathfinder" mission is expected to launch
in 2008 to test formation flying and other technologies. LISA will
launch a few years after this.
"The study of gravitational radiation is the newest frontier
in astronomy," said Lee Samuel Finn, professor
of astronomy and astrophysics and director of Penn State's Center
for Gravitational Wave Physics. "Scientists and engineers
around the world are working together to make LISA a reality. Steinn's
work, one important piece among many, builds upon theories and
models developed in recent years at Penn State and other institutes."
LISA will detect low-frequency waves, in the millihertz range.
LIGO, the Laser Interferometer
Gravitational Wave Observatory,
will detect higher-frequency, kilohertz waves. The ground-based
LIGO is funded by the National Science
Foundation. Observations
are being conducted at the two LIGO facilities, in Livingston,
Louisiana, and Hanford, Washington.
LISA is a joint venture between NASA, the European
Space Agency,
and European national space agencies. In addition to leading the
LISA Pathfinder mission, Europe will contribute much of the scientific
instrumentation and the interplanetary propulsion systems to LISA.
NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center will manage the mission for
NASA and will provide the spacecraft and final integration. NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory will supply NASA's test package on LISA
Pathfinder and the scientific instrumentation and operations support
for the main LISA mission.
More information about the mission is available at http://lisa.nasa.gov/.
[ C W ]
CONTACTS:
Steinn Sigurdsson: (+1) 814-863-6038, steinn@astro.psu.edu
Lee Samuel Finn: (+1) 814-863-9605, LSFinn@psu.edu
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): (+1) 814-863-4682, science@psu.edu
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