English

Astrometric Gravitational-Wave Detection via Stellar Interferometry

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2022-07-06 v2 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology High Energy Physics - Phenomenology High Energy Physics - Theory

Abstract

We evaluate the potential for gravitational-wave (GW) detection in the frequency band from 10 nHz to 1 μ\muHz using extremely high-precision astrometry of a small number of stars. In particular, we argue that non-magnetic, photometrically stable hot white dwarfs (WD) located at \sim kpc distances may be optimal targets for this approach. Previous studies of astrometric GW detection have focused on the potential for less precise surveys of large numbers of stars; our work provides an alternative optimization approach to this problem. Interesting GW sources in this band are expected at characteristic strains around hc1017×(μHz/fGW)h_c \sim 10^{-17} \times \left(\mu\text{Hz}/f_{\text{GW}}\right). The astrometric angular precision required to see these sources is Δθhc\Delta \theta \sim h_c after integrating for a time T1/fGWT \sim 1/f_{\text{GW}}. We show that jitter in the photometric center of WD of this type due to starspots is bounded to be small enough to permit this high-precision, small-NN approach. We discuss possible noise arising from stellar reflex motion induced by orbiting objects and show how it can be mitigated. The only plausible technology able to achieve the requisite astrometric precision is a space-based stellar interferometer. Such a future mission with few-meter-scale collecting dishes and baselines of O(100 km)\mathcal{O}(100\text{ km}) is sufficient to achieve the target precision. This collector size is broadly in line with the collectors proposed for some formation-flown, space-based astrometer or optical synthetic-aperture imaging-array concepts proposed for other science reasons. The proposed baseline is however somewhat larger than the km-scale baselines discussed for those concepts, but we see no fundamental technical obstacle to utilizing such baselines. A mission of this type thus also holds the promise of being one of the few ways to access interesting GW sources in this band.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2204.07677,
  title  = {Astrometric Gravitational-Wave Detection via Stellar Interferometry},
  author = {Michael A. Fedderke and Peter W. Graham and Bruce Macintosh and Surjeet Rajendran},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2204.07677},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

19 pages. Published version

R2 v1 2026-06-24T10:49:38.712Z