SyZyGy: A Straight Interferometric Spacecraft System for Gravity Wave Observations
F. B. Estabrook, J. W. Armstrong, Massimo Tinto, William Folkner

TL;DR
SyZyGy proposes a linear spacecraft array for gravitational wave detection, offering technical simplifications and sensitivity in an intermediate frequency band between ground-based detectors and LISA.
Contribution
It introduces a linear array configuration for space-based GW detection, simplifying design and operational requirements while maintaining competitive sensitivity.
Findings
Degraded low-frequency sensitivity compared to triangular arrays
Comparable peak and high-frequency sensitivities to GWs
Potential for intermediate frequency GW observations with high sensitivity
Abstract
We apply TDI, unfolding the general triangular configuration, to the special case of a linear array of three spacecraft. We show that such an array ("SyZyGy") has, compared with an equilateral triangle GW detector of the same scale, degraded (but non-zero) sensitivity at low-frequencies (f<<c/(arrany size)) but similar peak and high-frequency sensitivities to GWs. Sensitivity curves are presented for SyZyGys having various arm-lengths. A number of technical simplifications result from the linear configuration. These include only one faceted (e.g., cubical) proof mass per spacecraft, intra-spacecraft laser metrology needed only at the central spacecraft, placement in a single appropriate orbit can reduce Doppler drifts so that no laser beam modulation is required for ultra-stable oscillator noise calibration, and little or no time-dependent articulation of the telescopes to maintain…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
