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LISA Pathfinder overview
Objective LISA Pathfinder will pave the way for the LISA mission by testing in space the very concept of gravitational wave detection.
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LISA Pathfinder will pave the way for a major ESA/NASA mission planned for the near future: LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna), aimed at detecting gravitational waves generated by very massive objects such as black holes. Detecting gravitational waves will tell us more about the way space and time are interconnected. The mission consists of placing two test-masses in a nearly perfect gravitational free-fall, and of controlling and measuring their motion with unprecedented accuracy. This is achieved through state-of-the-art technology comprising inertial sensors, a laser metrology system, a drag-free control system and an ultra-precise micro-propulsion system.
All these technologies are essential not only for LISA; they also lie at the heart of any future space-based test of Einstein's General Relativity. LISA Pathfinder is scheduled for launch in 2011.
Completely different method of observing the Universe Virtually our entire knowledge about the Universe is based upon the observation of electromagnetic waves, such as visible light, infrared, ultraviolet, radio, X-rays and gamma rays. LISA Pathfinder will pave the way to a completely different method of observing the Universe: detecting gravitational waves. This will allow astrophysicists to address some of the most fundamental questions about the Universe and possibly raise new ones, such as the nature of inspirals and mergers of binary black holes, the most powerful transformations of energy in the Universe.
Very first detection of gravitational waves in space
Only feasible in space
Greater accuracy than ever achieved before
First-time application of a micro-Newton electric propulsion system
LTP motion sensor – the best ever flown in space
LISA Pathfinder carries two advanced instruments: The LTP (LISA Technology Package), a payload developed by European institutes and industry. It contains two identical proof masses in the form of 46 mm cubes made of gold-platinum, each suspending in its own vacuum can. They shall simulate the observational arrangement for the LISA mission, with the difference that the distance between the proof masses is reduced from 5 million kilometres to 35 centimetres.
The Disturbance Reduction System (DRS) is an experiment provided by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, which includes also a set of micro-rockets that aim to control the spacecraft’s position to within a millionth of a millimetre.
Once validated by this mission, the technology on LISA Pathfinder will be ready to be used in the more complex and further-reaching mission LISA. There the relative movement of two spacecrafts located 5 million kilometres apart will be measured to an accuracy of 10 picometres (1 picometre is equal to one millionth of a millionth of a metre).
The launch of the LISA Pathfinder is planned for 2011. The spacecraft will be launched by a VEGA rocket from Kourou, French Guiana, and will be placed into a slightly elliptical parking orbit. From there, it will use its own propulsion module to reach its final operational orbit, a 500 000 kilometres by 800 000 kilometres halo orbit around the first Sun-Earth Lagrange point, at 1.5 million kilometres from Earth. After the last transfer burn is performed, and the health of the science spacecraft is ascertained, the propulsion module will be jettisoned. LISA Pathfinder’s operational phase will last six months, shared between 90 days LTP and 60 days DRS, and 30 days joint operations The DRS experiment will be using the European LTP sensor for its measurements. The mission itself could be extended to one year. History LISA Pathfinder was approved by the ESA Science Programme Committee (SPC) in November 2000. It was further reconfirmed by the same body and by the ESA Council in May 2002, as part of ESA’s new 'Cosmic Vision' Scientific Programme. Last update: 2 November 2009
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