The Effects of Orbital Motion on LISA Time Delay Interferometry
Neil J. Cornish, Ronald W. Hellings

TL;DR
This paper examines how orbital motion affects the performance of time delay interferometry (TDI) in space-based gravitational wave detectors like LISA, revealing limitations due to rotation and arm flexing.
Contribution
It analyzes the impact of realistic orbital dynamics on TDI variables, proposing new Delta-Sagnac variables and identifying challenges for laser stability requirements.
Findings
Sagnac variables do not cancel laser noise in rotating configurations.
A new set of Delta-Sagnac variables can approximate noise cancellation.
Arm flexing prevents complete laser noise cancellation, demanding high laser stability.
Abstract
In an effort to eliminate laser phase noise in laser interferometer spaceborne gravitational wave detectors, several combinations of signals have been found that allow the laser noise to be canceled out while gravitational wave signals remain. This process is called time delay interferometry (TDI). In the papers that defined the TDI variables, their performance was evaluated in the limit that the gravitational wave detector is fixed in space. However, the performance depends on certain symmetries in the armlengths that are available if the detector is fixed in space, but that will be broken in the actual rotating and flexing configuration produced by the LISA orbits. In this paper we investigate the performance of these TDI variables for the real LISA orbits. First, addressing the effects of rotation, we verify Daniel Shaddock's result that the Sagnac variables will not cancel out the…
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