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The Next Generation Global Gravitational Wave Observatory: The Science Book

Authors :
Kalogera, Vicky
Sathyaprakash, B. S.
Bailes, Matthew
Bizouard, Marie-Anne
Buonanno, Alessandra
Burrows, Adam
Colpi, Monica
Evans, Matt
Fairhurst, Stephen
Hild, Stefan
Kasliwal, Mansi M.
Lehner, Luis
Mandel, Ilya
Mandic, Vuk
Nissanke, Samaya
Papa, Maria Alessandra
Reddy, Sanjay
Rosswog, Stephan
Broeck, Chris Van Den
Ajith, P.
Anand, Shreya
Andreoni, Igor
Arun, K. G.
Barausse, Enrico
Baryakhtar, Masha
Belgacem, Enis
Berry, Christopher P. L.
Bertacca, Daniele
Brito, Richard
Caprini, Chiara
Chatziioannou, Katerina
Coughlin, Michael
Cusin, Giulia
Dietrich, Tim
Dirian, Yves
East, William E.
Fan, Xilong
Figueroa, Daniel
Foffa, Stefano
Ghosh, Archisman
Hall, Evan
Harms, Jan
Harry, Ian
Hinderer, Tanja
Janka, Thomas
Justham, Stephen
Kasen, Dan
Kotake, Kei
Lovelace, Geoffrey
Maggiore, Michele
Mangiagli, Alberto
Mapelli, Michela
Maselli, Andrea
Matas, Andrew
McIver, Jess
Messer, Bronson
Mezzacappa, Tony
Mills, Cameron
Mueller, Bernhard
Müller, Ewald
Pürrer, Michael
Pani, Paolo
Pratten, Geraint
Regimbau, Tania
Sakellariadou, Mairi
Schneider, Raffaella
Sesana, Alberto
Shao, Lijing
Sotiriou, P. Thomas
Tamanini, Nicola
Tauris, Thomas
Thrane, Eric
Valiante, Rosa
van de Meent, Maarten
Varma, Vijay
Vines, Justin
Vitale, Salvatore
Yang, Huan
Yunes, Nicolas
Zumalacarregui, Miguel
Punturo, Michele
Reitze, David
Couvares, Peter
Katsanevas, Stavros
Kajita, Takaaki
Lueck, Harald
McClelland, David
Rowan, Sheila
Sanders, Gary
Shoemaker, David
Brand, Jo van den
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The next generation of ground-based gravitational-wave detectors will observe coalescences of black holes and neutron stars throughout the cosmos, thousands of them with exceptional fidelity. The Science Book is the result of a 3-year effort to study the science capabilities of networks of next generation detectors. Such networks would make it possible to address unsolved problems in numerous areas of physics and astronomy, from Cosmology to Beyond the Standard Model of particle physics, and how they could provide insights into workings of strongly gravitating systems, astrophysics of compact objects and the nature of dense matter. It is inevitable that observatories of such depth and finesse will make new discoveries inaccessible to other windows of observation. In addition to laying out the rich science potential of the next generation of detectors, this report provides specific science targets in five different areas in physics and astronomy and the sensitivity requirements to accomplish those science goals. This report is the second in a six part series of reports by the GWIC 3G Subcommittee: i) Expanding the Reach of Gravitational Wave Observatories to the Edge of the Universe, ii) The Next Generation Global Gravitational Wave Observatory: The Science Book (this report), iii) 3G R&D: R&D for the Next Generation of Ground-based Gravitational Wave Detectors, iv) Gravitational Wave Data Analysis: Computing Challenges in the 3G Era, v) Future Ground-based Gravitational-wave Observatories: Synergies with Other Scientific Communities, and vi) An Exploration of Possible Governance Models for the Future Global Gravitational-Wave Observatory Network.<br />Comment: 69 pages, 18 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2111.06990
Document Type :
Working Paper