Low-Frequency Sources of Gravitational Waves: A Tutorial
B. F. Schutz

TL;DR
This tutorial explains how space-based gravitational wave detectors like LISA can observe low-frequency sources, enabling detailed astrophysical and fundamental physics studies, including black hole confirmation and cosmological insights.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of low-frequency gravitational wave sources, estimation formulas for wave amplitudes, and discusses potential scientific discoveries with LISA.
Findings
Estimations of gravitational wave amplitudes for various sources.
Potential to confirm black hole existence with high accuracy.
Insights into early Universe and cosmology from low-frequency observations.
Abstract
Gravitational wave detectors in space, particularly the LISA project, can study a rich variety of astronomical systems whose gravitational radiation is not detectable from the ground, because it is emitted in the low-frequency gravitational wave band (0.1 mHz to 1 Hz) that is inaccessible to ground-based detectors. Sources include binary systems in our Galaxy and massive black holes in distant galaxies. The radiation from many of these sources will be so strong that it will be possible to make remarkably detailed studies of the physics of the systems. These studies will have importance both for astrophysics (most notably in binary evolution theory and models for active galaxies) and for fundamental physics. In particular, it should be possible to make decisive measurements to confirm the existence of black holes and to test, with accuracies better than 1%, general relativity's…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
