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Free-flight experiments in LISA Pathfinder

Authors :
C. Trenkel
F. Martin-Porqueras
J. Baird
Nikolaos Karnesis
Lluis Gesa
R. Gerndt
Paul McNamara
A. Bursi
A. Moroni
G. Auger
Curt Cutler
Karsten Danzmann
James Ira Thorpe
Valerio Ferroni
Gerhard Heinzel
C. Zanoni
Ian Harrison
R. Maarschalkerweerd
B. Johlander
Carlos F. Sopuerta
Michael Perreur-Lloyd
Rita Dolesi
R. Giusteri
M. Born
A. Schleicher
Daniele Vetrugno
N. Dunbar
P. Sarra
Luis Mendes
Peter Wass
Daniel Hollington
T. J. Sumner
Eric Plagnol
C. García Marirrodriga
B. Kaune
A. Wittchen
H. Rozemeijer
U. Ragnit
N. Brandt
H. Ward
S. Madden
D. Wealthy
Ingo Diepholz
P. Prat
P. Pivato
Mauro Hueller
H. B. Tu
Víctor S. Martín
Ewan Fitzsimons
Antonella Cavalleri
S. Paczkowski
Jacob Slutsky
M. Cruise
Michele Armano
Pierre Binetruy
J. A. Romera Perez
Davor Mance
José F. F. Mendes
Gudrun Wanner
Stefano Vitale
Juan Ramos-Castro
Philippe Jetzer
W. J. Weber
M. Freschi
Ivan Lloro
D. Texier
Domenico Giardini
S. Waschke
Antoine Petiteau
J. Huesler
J. Reiche
Oliver Jennrich
A. Cesarini
G. Russano
Tobias Ziegler
N. Korsakova
Peter Zweifel
H. Inchauspe
Catia Grimani
P. Maghami
Heather Audley
S. Wen
M. Caleno
D. I. Robertson
Christian J. Killow
Martin Hewitson
Luigi Ferraioli
Ignacio Mateos
Daniele Bortoluzzi
Miquel Nofrarías
J. Gallegos
Ferran Gibert
Source :
Journal of Physics: Conference Series, Journal of Physics: Conference Series 610 (2015), Nr. 1, Journal of Physics Conference Series 610 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Bristol : Institute of Physics Publishing, 2015.

Abstract

The LISA Pathfinder mission will demonstrate the technology of drag-free test masses for use as inertial references in future space-based gravitational wave detectors. To accomplish this, the Pathfinder spacecraft will perform drag-free flight about a test mass while measuring the acceleration of this primary test mass relative to a second reference test mass. Because the reference test mass is contained within the same spacecraft, it is necessary to apply forces on it to maintain its position and attitude relative to the spacecraft. These forces are a potential source of acceleration noise in the LISA Pathfinder system that are not present in the full LISA configuration. While LISA Pathfinder has been designed to meet it's primary mission requirements in the presence of this noise, recent estimates suggest that the on-orbit performance may be limited by this `suspension noise'. The drift-mode or free-flight experiments provide an opportunity to mitigate this noise source and further characterize the underlying disturbances that are of interest to the designers of LISA-like instruments. This article provides a high-level overview of these experiments and the methods under development to analyze the resulting data.<br />13 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to Journal Of Physics, Conference Series. Presented at 10th International LISA Symposium, May 2014, Gainesville, FL, USA

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17426588
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Physics: Conference Series, Journal of Physics: Conference Series 610 (2015), Nr. 1, Journal of Physics Conference Series 610 (2015)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1bd40e0945714d665dee325e55980aef
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15488/4045