Numerical simulation of sky localization for LISA-TAIJI joint observation

28 Feb 2020  ·  Gang Wang, Wei-Tou Ni, Wen-Biao Han, Shu-Cheng Yang, Xing-Yu Zhong ·

LISA is considered to be launched alongside the Athena to probe the energetic astrophysical processes. LISA can determine the direction of sources for Athena's follow-up observation. As another space gravitational wave mission, TAIJI is expected to be launched in the 2030s. The LISA-TAIJI network would provide abundant merits for sources understanding. In this work, we simulate the joint LISA-TAIJI observations for gravitational waves from coalescing supermassive black hole binaries and monochromatic sources. By using the numerical mission orbits, we evaluate the performances of sky localization for various time-delay interferometry channels. For 30 days observation until coalescence, the LISA-TAIJI network in optimal operation can localize all simulated binary sources, $(10^7,\ 3.3 \times 10^6)\ M_\odot$, $(10^6,\ 3.3 \times 10^5)\ M_\odot$ and $(10^5,\ 3.3 \times 10^4)\ M_\odot$ at redshift $z=2$, in 0.4 deg$^2$ (field of view of Wide Field Imager on Athena). The angular resolution can be improved by more than 10 times comparing to LISA or TAIJI single detector at a given percentage of population. The improvements for monochromatic sources at 3 mHz and 10 mHz are relatively moderate in one-year observation. The precision of sky localization could be improved by around 1 to 3 times comparing to single LISA at a given percentage of sources. For a simulated 90 days observation for monochromatic waves, the LISA-TAIJI network still represents a considerable localization advantage which could be more than 10 times better.

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General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology Astrophysics of Galaxies Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics