Astrometric Gravitational-Wave Detection via Stellar Interferometry
Michael A. Fedderke, Peter W. Graham, Bruce Macintosh, and Surjeet, Rajendran

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of using high-precision astrometry of a few carefully selected stars, particularly white dwarfs, with space-based interferometry to detect gravitational waves in the nanohertz to microhertz frequency band, offering a new approach complementary to existing methods.
Contribution
It proposes a novel optimization approach focusing on small numbers of stable stars and space-based interferometry for low-frequency gravitational-wave detection.
Findings
White dwarfs are suitable targets for astrometric GW detection.
A space-based interferometer with ~100 km baselines can achieve the necessary precision.
The method can access GW sources in the 10 nHz to 1 μHz band.
Abstract
We evaluate the potential for gravitational-wave (GW) detection in the frequency band from 10 nHz to 1 Hz 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 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 . The astrometric angular precision required to see these sources is after integrating for a time . We show that jitter in the photometric center of WD of this…
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