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Observing gravitational waves with solar system astrometry

Giorgio Mentasti, Carlo R. Contaldi

Abstract

The subtle influence of gravitational waves on the apparent positioning of celestial bodies offers novel observational windows. We calculate the expected astrometric signal induced by an isotropic Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background (SGWB) in the short distance limit. Our focus is on the resultant proper motion of Solar System objects, a signal on the same time scales addressed by Pulsar Timing Arrays (PTA). We derive the corresponding astrometric deflection patterns, finding that they manifest as distinctive dipole and quadrupole correlations, or in some cases, may not be present. Our analysis encompasses both Einsteinian and non-Einsteinian polarisations. We estimate the upper limits for the amplitude of a scale-invariant SGWB that could be obtained by tracking the proper motions of large numbers of solar system objects such as asteroids. With the Gaia satellite and the Vera C. Rubin Observatory poised to track an extensive sample of asteroids-ranging from $O(10^5)$ to $O(10^6)$, we highlight the significant future potential for similar surveys to contribute to our understanding of the SGWB.

Observing gravitational waves with solar system astrometry

Abstract

The subtle influence of gravitational waves on the apparent positioning of celestial bodies offers novel observational windows. We calculate the expected astrometric signal induced by an isotropic Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background (SGWB) in the short distance limit. Our focus is on the resultant proper motion of Solar System objects, a signal on the same time scales addressed by Pulsar Timing Arrays (PTA). We derive the corresponding astrometric deflection patterns, finding that they manifest as distinctive dipole and quadrupole correlations, or in some cases, may not be present. Our analysis encompasses both Einsteinian and non-Einsteinian polarisations. We estimate the upper limits for the amplitude of a scale-invariant SGWB that could be obtained by tracking the proper motions of large numbers of solar system objects such as asteroids. With the Gaia satellite and the Vera C. Rubin Observatory poised to track an extensive sample of asteroids-ranging from to , we highlight the significant future potential for similar surveys to contribute to our understanding of the SGWB.
Paper Structure (15 equations, 1 figure, 2 tables)

This paper contains 15 equations, 1 figure, 2 tables.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: The GW induced angular correlations $\xi(\theta)$ as a function of the angular separation of tracked object pairs $\theta$. These functions are analogous to the Hellings-Down curves for PTA observations. All correlations are either purely dipolar or quadrupolar and are degenerate in all polarisations, up to an overall factor.