Will LISA Detect Harmonic Gravitational Waves from Galactic Cosmic String Loops?
Zimu Khakhaleva-Li, Craig J. Hogan

TL;DR
This paper develops a simulation framework to predict the potential for LISA to detect harmonic gravitational waves from galactic cosmic string loops, highlighting the most promising parameters and the low likelihood of detecting field theory strings.
Contribution
The authors introduce a new simulation framework for predicting LISA's detection prospects of harmonic GWs from galactic cosmic string loops, considering various string tensions and loop sizes.
Findings
Detection probability for field theory strings is less than 2% in a 1-year mission.
Large loops with low tension are the most promising targets for detection.
Detection of cosmic superstrings with low intercommutation probability is highly promising.
Abstract
Rapid advancement in the observation of cosmic strings has been made in recent years placing increasingly stringent constraints on their properties, with from Pulsar Timing Array (PTA). Cosmic string loops with low string tension clump in the Galaxy due to slow loop decay and low gravitational recoil, resulting in great enhancement to loop abundance in the Galaxy. With an average separation of down to just a fraction of a kpc, and the total power of gravitational wave (GW) emission dominated by harmonic modes spanning a wide angular scale, resolved loops located in proximity are powerful, persistent, and highly monochromatic sources of GW with a harmonic signature not replicated by any other sources, making them prime targets for direct detection by the upcoming Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), whose frequency range is well-matched. Unlike detection of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
