Phys. Rev. D 72, 042003 (2005) [18 pages]Geometric time delay interferometrySee Also: Erratum Received 4 May 2005; published 12 August 2005 The space-based gravitational-wave observatory LISA, a NASA-ESA mission to be launched after 2012, will achieve its optimal sensitivity using time delay interferometry (TDI), a LISA-specific technique needed to cancel the otherwise overwhelming laser noise in the interspacecraft phase measurements. The TDI observables of the Michelson and Sagnac types have been interpreted physically as the virtual measurements of a synthesized interferometer. In this paper, I present Geometric TDI, a new and intuitive approach to extend this interpretation to all TDI observables. Unlike the standard algebraic formalism, Geometric TDI provides a combinatorial algorithm to explore exhaustively the space of second-generation TDI observables (i.e., those that cancel laser noise in LISA-like interferometers with time-dependent arm lengths). Using this algorithm, I survey the space of second-generation TDI observables of length (i.e., number of component phase measurements) up to 24, and I identify alternative, improved forms of the standard second-generation TDI observables. The alternative forms have improved high-frequency gravitational-wave sensitivity in realistic noise conditions (because they have fewer nulls in the gravitational-wave and noise response functions), and are less susceptible to instrumental gaps and glitches (because their component phase measurements span shorter time periods). © 2005 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.72.042003
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.72.042003
PACS:
04.80.Nn, 07.60.Ly, 95.55.Ym
See AlsoErratum: Michele Vallisneri, Erratum: Geometric time delay interferometry [Phys. Rev. D 72, 042003 (2005)], Phys. Rev. D 76, 109903 (2007). |
