eLISA: Astrophysics and cosmology in the millihertz regime
Pau Amaro-Seoane, Sofiane Aoudia, Stanislav Babak, Pierre Bin\'etruy,, Emanuele Berti, Alejandro Boh\'e, Chiara Caprini, Monica Colpi, Neil J., Cornish, Karsten Danzmann, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Dufaux, Jonathan Gair, Oliver, Jennrich, Philippe Jetzer, Antoine Klein, Ryan N. Lang

TL;DR
eLISA is a proposed space-based gravitational wave observatory that will explore low-frequency gravitational waves, enabling groundbreaking studies of black hole mergers, cosmic evolution, and tests of general relativity.
Contribution
This paper introduces the eLISA mission concept, highlighting its potential to open a new observational window in gravitational wave astronomy and cosmology.
Findings
Detection of black hole mergers up to z=15
Observation of white dwarf binaries in our galaxy
Potential to test fundamental physics and early universe signals
Abstract
This document introduces the exciting and fundamentally new science and astronomy that the European New Gravitational Wave Observatory (NGO) mission (derived from the previous LISA proposal) will deliver. The mission (which we will refer to by its informal name "eLISA") will survey for the first time the low-frequency gravitational wave band (about 0.1 mHz to 1 Hz), with sufficient sensitivity to detect interesting individual astrophysical sources out to z = 15. The eLISA mission will discover and study a variety of cosmic events and systems with high sensitivity: coalescences of massive black holes binaries, brought together by galaxy mergers; mergers of earlier, less-massive black holes during the epoch of hierarchical galaxy and black-hole growth; stellar-mass black holes and compact stars in orbits just skimming the horizons of massive black holes in galactic nuclei of the present…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
