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GSSI Gravity Group

This page serves to present the work of the GSSI gravitational-wave group, which means that its content is strongly focused on the group's activities. We do not intend to provide a generic overview of research topics in this field.

Members

Einstein Telescope

Einstein Telescope (artistic conception)

The Einstein Telescope (ET) is a proposed underground infrastructure to host a third-generation, gravitational-wave observatory [ET home page]. It builds on the success of current, second-generation laser-interferometric detectors Advanced Virgo and Advanced LIGO, whose breakthrough discoveries of merging black holes (BHs) and neutron stars over the past 5 years have ushered scientists into the new era of gravitational-wave astronomy. The Einstein Telescope will achieve a greatly improved sensitivity by increasing the size of the interferometer from the 3km arm length of the Virgo detector to 10km, and by implementing a series of new technologies. These include a cryogenic system to cool some of the main optics to 10 – 20K, new quantum technologies to reduce the fluctuations of the light, and a set of infrastructural and active noise-mitigation measures to reduce environmental perturbations.

The Einstein Telescope will make it possible, for the first time, to explore the Universe through gravitational waves along its cosmic history up to the cosmological dark ages, shedding light on open questions of fundamental physics and cosmology [ET science case]. It will probe the physics near black-hole horizons (from tests of general relativity to quantum gravity), help understanding the nature of dark matter (such as primordial BHs, axion clouds, dark matter accreting on compact objects), and the nature of dark energy and possible modifications of general relativity at cosmological scales. Exploiting the ET sensitivity and frequency band, the entire population of stellar and intermediate mass black holes will be accessible over the entire history of the Universe, enabling to understand their origin (stellar versus primordial), evolution, and demography. ET will observe the neutron-star inspiral phase and the onset of tidal effects with high signal-to-noise ratio providing an unprecedented insight into the interior structure of neutron stars and probing fundamental properties of matter in a completely unexplored regime (QCD at ultra-high densities and possible exotic states of matter). The excellent sensitivity extending to kilohertz frequencies will also allow us to probe details of the merger and post-merger phase. ET will operate together with a new innovative generation of electromagnetic observatories covering the band from radio to gamma rays (such as the Square Kilometer Array, the Vera Rubin Observatory, E-ELT, Athena, CTA).

The beginning of construction is foreseen in 2026 with the goal to start observations in 2035. Two candidate sites are under investigation: one in Sardinia and one in the Euregio Meuse-Rhine. Site-characterization studies are under way towards a site selection, which is expected for 2024. The evaluation of the sites must consider the feasibility of the construction and predict the impact of the local environment on the detector sensitivity and operation. The gravitational-wave community in the US is currently working on its own third-generation detector concepts Voyager [Voyager]and Cosmic Explorer [Cosmic Explorer] towards a future global detector network with the Einstein Telescope [3G science case].

At the Gran Sasso Science Institute, the GW group is involved in experimental and design studies of the instrument, in the development of data-analysis techniques as well as the evaluation of the science capacity of the ET detector configuration, and the group also develops the science case in combination with (potential or certain) future EM facilities like THESEUS [THESEUS], E-ELT [E-ELT], or VRO (formerly LSST) [VRO].

Site Characterization and Evaluation

Site-evaluation parameters

Sardinia candidate site

GW Data Analysis

Advanced LIGO and Virgo detectors started the first scientific run on September 2015, and just completed the O3 run. On the first two runs, a total of 11 GW signals have been detected: O1-O2 Catalog paper. They were all coming from the coalescence and merging of compact objects, 10 from Black Hole Binaries (BBH) and 1 from a Binary Neutron Star (BNS)

The BNS arrived on is the first case of Multi-Messenger Astronomy between GW and EM.

Parameter estimation of compact binaries

Cosmology: Probing the Early Universe

Searches for generic GW transients

Instrument Science

Cryogenics

Environmental Noise

Detector Control

Earthquake early warning with gravitational sensors

Quantum noise modeling and detector configurations

Thermal noise in GW detectors

Multi-messenger astronomy

Cosmology with multi-messenger transients

Multimessenger Search of Core-Collapse Supernovae

Wiki Software

Consult the User's Guide for information on using the wiki software.

Getting started