Announcements

New LIGO/VIRGO Catalog Released

11/02/2020

The LIGO/VIRGO Collaboration have released a new catalog of gravitational wave detections, combining events detected in O1, O2, and the first six months of the O3 runs. Improvements to the instruments have resulted in a signifcant increase in the rate of detections in O3, producing a more complete portrait of the mass distribution of merger events in this catalog.

More information about the updated catalog can be found here.

LISA Announces Second Data Challenge!

10/21/2020

The LISA Consortium has released the first portion of the Second LISA Data Challenge (LDC-2a), codenamed "Sangria," that consists of both a training data set as well as a blinad data challenge. Analyses for LDC-2a build on lessons taught in the First Data Challenge, and the LISA Consortium recommends completing several portions of that challenge before starting on the second data set.

For those who complete the challenge, your results may be submitted to the LISA Data Challenge working group for evalution. The deadline for submission is October 1, 2021.

We hope you enjoyed the 2020 LISA Symposium!

9/8/2020

The LISA Symposium last week was the most highly attended to date! We thank the organizers for their hard work and all the speakers for their contributions. Talks from the conference continue to be available on the meeting website for a limited time. A playlist of pre-recorded presentations is currently available on YouTube.

We hope you enjoyed the meeting and we look forward to joining you in two years for the next LISA Symposium!

2020 LISA Symposium
Agenda Now Available

7/24/2020

The agenda for the LISA XIII Symposium including the list of speakers, has been posted on the conference website (Link). A playlist of the pre-recorded presentations is now available on YouTube, for participants to view in advance of the live sessions.

2020 LISA Symposium
Abstract Submission Deadline Extended

7/20/2020

The deadline for abstract submissions for the LISA XIII Symposium has been extended to 20 July at 12:00 UTC. The abstract submission portal will remain open after that time, but will close permanently on 10 August at 12:00 UTC. However, any abstracts received between 20 July and 10 August will only be eligible for a pre-recorded contributed presentation.

2020 LISA Symposium Registration and Abstract Submission

6/24/2020

Registration and abstract submission for contributed talks for the 13th International LISA Symposium are now open. This virtual meeting will be held September 1-3, 2020 and will be open to all and free of charge. The symposium will consist of invited live talks, contributed live talks, and live discussion sessions, with many additional invited and contributed talks prerecorded.

The deadline for abstract submission is 17 July, 23:59 UTC.

2020 LISA Symposium rescheduled as virtual meeting

5/21/2020

The 13th International LISA Symposium will take place everywhere online on three afternoons (UTC), on September 1-3, 2020. The symposium will focus on the status of the LISA mission; on the latest developments in its design and technology; on the science (astronomy, astrophysics, cosmology, and fundamental physics) of LISA’s millihertz gravitational-wave sources; and on the ensuing challenges in gravitational theory and analysis.

The live program of invited and contributed presentations, panels, and townhalls will be supplemented by prerecorded talks and tutorials, which will be available on the conference website in advance of the symposium. A call for contributed presentations will go out in early June, with a deadline in mid-July; and the final program should be circulated by early August. More information will appear soon at the LISA symposium website,.

2020 LISA Symposium Cancelled

4/13/2020

Due to the ongoing global emergency, organizers for the LISA Symposium originally planned for this July in Glasgow have decided that it can no longer take place. Discussions are in progress to consider an alternative meeting format this year and a timeline for a rescheduled Symposium. Updates will be posted as decisions are announced.

New round of LISA Preparatory Science posted in ROSES-2020

4/7/2020

NASA has posted a new opportunity to ROSES-2020 calling for proposals to the LISA Preparatory Science Program. This program provides support for U.S. investigators to conduct activities that contribute to furthering the eventual science yield of LISA, inluding waveform simulations, analysis techniques, cross-disciplinary studies, preparatory astrophysical observations, and more. Mandatory NOIs are due by 15 September 2020, and the proposal due date is 15 December 2020. Read the announcement.

NASA Awards LISA telescope contract to New York firm

3/17/2020

The development of the LISA telescopes is one of NASA's primary hardware contributions to the ESA-led mission. On March 16, 2020, NASA announced that the engineering unit development contract for the planned telescope design has been awarded to L3Harris Corporation, located in Rochester, NY. The development and testing of an engineering unit is a major step in producing space-ready hardware for the mission. Read the announcement

LISA Symposium — Save the Date!
19-24 July 2020
Glasgow, Scotland

02/20/2020

It is five months to the start of this year's LISA Symposium! The website and the registration form details are not yet finalized, but they will be available very soon with registration anticipated to open at the end of this month and abstract submission opening during March.

The Symposium will be formally opened at a complimentary welcome event in the University of Glasgow's Hunterian Museum on Sunday 19th July. The Symposium will then run from 9am on Monday 20th till 5pm on Friday 24th July in the Bute Hall with the conference dinner taking place mid-week at the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum. Along side these formal conference activities and lots of informal opportunities to meet with colleagues there will be a number of social events that may be reserved through the registration page.

For inquiries, you may contact lisasymposium2020@glasgow.ac.uk.

LISA Interest Survey
Due: January 10, 2020

12/10/2019

Attention US researchers! The NASA LISA Study Team is requesting your input regarding the future use of data from the LISA gravitational wave observatory. Even if your research area is not directly related to gravitational waves, we welcome your feedback to gauge the needs and interests of the broad US astronomical research community. This 16 question survey should take 5 or 10 minutes to complete. We welcome your input by Friday, January 10, 2020.

LISA Passes Review Milestone

12/01/2019

LISA has successfully completed the Mission Consolidation Review (MCR), a review conducted by the European Space Agency (ESA) to assess progress at the middle of Phase A. The review team examined the current state of the mission design, payload developments, and programatic planning at this early stage in the mission formulation process. NASA supported ESA in this review by providing inputs on NASA technology development activities as well as subject matter experts who assisted in reviewing materials. The LISA team will now focus on the activities for the remainder of mission Phase A.

NASA's LISA Study Team welcomes new membership

10/23/2019

The NASA LISA Study Team welcomes seven new members to it's ranks! For information about the current NLST membership and alumni who have stepped down, please consult the Study Team Roster.

Call for Nominations to Augment the NASA LISA Study Team
Due: October 11, 2019

09/19/2019

NASA welcomes nominations, including self-nominations, for new members of the NASA LISA Study Team (deadline: October 11, 2019). We particularly encourage people of diverse backgrounds, skills, career stages, and viewpoints to apply. See the full text of the call and application instructions for more information.

Newly discovered binary system will be a strong LISA source

08/09/2019

Astronomers using the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) have announced the discovery of ZTFJ1539+5027, a pair of white dwarfs that orbit one another roughly every seven minutes. This system will be a strong LISA source, detecable after roughly one week of observing and with a total signal-to-noise ratio of nearly 200 in a four-year LISA mission.

First Results from GRACE-FO's Laser Interferometer

07/19/2019

The first results from the Laser Ranging Instrument (LRI) on the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow On (GRACE-FO) mission were published in Physical Review Letters on July 19th, 2019. The GRACE-FO mission maps the Earth's gravity field by precisely tracking the relative positions of a pair of spacecraft that orbit the Earth. The LRI makes these measurements using heterodyne laser interferometry, the same technique that will be used for LISA. These first results from LRI demonstrate nanometer-level precision over the 220km range between the GRACE-FO satellites.

Event Horizon Telescope makes first image of a black hole

04/10/2019

The Event Horizon Telescope project, an international effort to link radio telescopes across Earth to build a planet-sized telescope with superb angular resolution has made the first image of a black hole. The image is of gas surrounding a black hole of nearly six billion solar masses in the galaxy M87. LISA will measure the mergers of massive black holes which are the ancestors of these supermassive black holes.

Ground-based gravitational wave observatories begin 3rd observing run

04/01/2019

O3, the third observing run of the advanced ground-based gravitational wave detectors has begun after the LIGO and Virgo teams have spent over a year upgrading their instruments to improved sensitivities. O3 is expected to last for a full year with increased event rates. O3 will also feature low-latency, public alerts which will enable follow-up of gravitational wave events by a variety of astronomical facilities.

LISA Data Challenge

7/11/2018

The first data set for the LISA Data Challenge has been released by the LISA Consortium. If you'd like to try your hand at extracting gravitational wave sources from simulated LISA data, you can download tools and data at the Data Challenge Website. The deadline for entries to this first challenge will be near the end of 2018.

LISA Symposium Program Posted

6/28/2018

The scientific program for the 12th International LISA Symposium is now posted on the conference website . The meeting will feature talks on the LISA mission, enabling technologies, data analysis, astrophysics, and related topics. Over 200 researchers from around the world will attend the conference in Chicago July 8th-13th. Late registration will be available until the start of the conference.

LISA Symposium Conference Website

GRACE-FO Launches LISA Technology

5/22/2018

The Gravity Recovery And Climate Explorer Follow-On (GRACE-FO) mission launched from Vandenberg AFB on a mission to map the Earth's gravitational field. While the primary spacecraft systems are a rebuild of the original GRACE mission, GRACE-FO carries the Laser Ranging Interferometer (LRI) technology demonstration which will use laser interferometry to measure nanometer changes between the two GRACE-FO spacecraft flying roughly 300km apart from one another. The LRI was built by a US-German collaboration that includes many LISA veterans and takes advantage of technologies that were originally developed to support LISA. The advancement of these technologies for GRACE-FO now adds experience that can be applied to LISA.

Read more on NASA.gov

LISA Symposium Registration Open

5/10/2018

The LISA Symposium being held in Chicago, IL on July 8-13 is still accepting registrations. This is the 12th edition of the once-per-two-year meeting that covers all aspects of LISA including mission development, instrumentation, theory, analysis, and astrophysics. The Abstract deadline closed on May 9th, 2018.

12th International LISA Symposium Now Accepting Abstracts

04/06/2018

Abstract submissions are open for the 12th International LISA Symposium, to be held 8-13 July 2018 in Chicago, IL. Submissions can be made at the abstract submission page.

The LISA Symposium is a wide-ranging conference that addresses the broad astrophysical scope of LISA science, mission, and technology development, as well as challenges and interesting questions facing the astrophysics and gravitational wave community.

If you still have not registered for the Symposium, visit the registration page.

We are looking forward to seeing you in Chicago this summer!

LISA Preparatory Science (LPS) ROSES Solicitation: Proposals Due June 14, 2018

03/27/2018

NASA is pleased to announce the LISA Preparatory Science (LPS) solicitation, as part of ROSES2018 (element D.13). The LPS will support science data analysis and LISA-related astrophysics research of US-based scientists. As part of the international LISA Consortium, US investigators will conduct research projects aimed at augmenting and complementing the LISA Consortium Data Analysis Work Packages as well as NASA LISA Study Office science and data activities . Proposers for the LISA Preparatory Science (LPS) solicitation should consult the LPS FAQ that is available at the NSPIRES website.

We look forward to your ideas!

Please note: Notices of Intent are mandatory for LPS and were due March 19, 2018. All questions should be addressed to the HQ POC for LPS, POC Rita Sambruna, rita.m.sambruna@nasa.gov

Registration open for the 12th International LISA Symposium - July 8-13 2018

03/23/2018

The 12th International LISA Symposium will be held in Chicago, IL on July 8-13. This biennial meeting covers the full range of LISA topics including astrophysics, data analysis, technology development, and mission development. This year's Symposium is hosted by the Center for Interdisciplinary Exploration and Research in Astrophysics (CIERA) at Northwestern University, and co-sponsored by the American Astronomical Society. Registration and hotel reservations are open now and Abstract submission will open soon.

NOI for LISA Preparatory Science: full list of team members + deadline extended to 19 March 2018

03/14/2018

Note to community: please make sure to visit the LISA Preparatory Science (LPS) FAQ (on the ROSES website), and -particularly- note the strong encouragment to include the full list of team members in the NOI.

This amendment delays due dates in anticipation of power loss to New England as a result of the upcoming storm. The mandatory NOI due date for ROSES-2018 D.13 LISA Preparatory Science has been changed to Monday March 19, 2018. The full proposal due date for D.13 LISA Preparatory Science remains June 14, 2018.

Questions concerning ROSES-2018 D.13 LISA Preparatory Science may be directed to POC: Rita Sambruna, rita.m.sambruna@nasa.gov

LPS FAQ

03/05/2018

Proposers for the LISA Preparatory Science (LPS) solicitation should consult the LPS FAQ that is available at the ROSES website (element D.13)

All questions should be addressed to the HQ POC for LPS, POC: Rita Sambruna, rita.m.sambruna@nasa.gov

LISA Preparatory Science (LPS) ROSES Solicitation: Mandatory NOI Due March 15, 2018

02/14/2018

NASA is pleased to announce the release in February 2018 of the LISA Preparatory Science (LPS) solicitation, as part of ROSES2018 (element D.13). The LPS will support science data analysis and LISA-related astrophysics research of US-based scientists. As part of the international LISA Consortium, US investigators will conduct research projects aimed at augmenting and complementing the LISA Consortium Data Analysis Work Packages as well as NASA LISA Study Office science and data activities .

Please note: Notices of Intent will be mandatory for LPS and are due March 15, 2018. Failure to submit an NOI may result in your proposal being returned without evaluation. We look forward to your ideas! POC: Rita Sambruna, rita.m.sambruna@nasa.gov

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Why LISA? ...Gravitational Waves.

What are Gravitational Waves?

This movie shows a simulation of the merger of two black holes and the resulting emission of gravitational radiation. The very fabric of space and time is distorted by massive objects, which is shown here by the colored fields. The outer sheets (red) correspond directly to outgoing gravitational radiation, which was recently detected by the NSF's LIGO observatories. Credit: NASA/C. Henze

Gravitational waves were first theorized by Albert Einstein. They are created during events such as supermassive black hole mergers, or collisions between two black holes that are billion times bigger than our Sun. These collisions are so powerful that they create distortions in spacetime, known as gravitational waves.

Gravitational waves detectable by the LISA mission could also come from other distant systems including smaller stellar mass black holes orbiting supermassive black holes, known as Extreme Mass Ratio Inspirals (EMRIs).

What do Gravitational Waves tell us?

There are many astrophysical phenomena that are either very dim or completely invisible in any form of light that astronomy has relied on for 400 years. Gravitational waves are a powerful new probe of the Universe that uses gravity instead of light to take measure of dynamical astrophysical phenomena. Studying gravitational waves gives enormous potential for discovering the parts of the universe that are invisible by other means, such as black holes, the Big Bang, and other, as yet unknown, objects. LISA will complement our knowledge about the beginning, evolution and structure of our universe.



Why do we need to go to space?

A space-based configuration allows for an extremely large detector to study regions of the gravitational wave spectrum that are inaccessible from Earth.

gravitational wave spectrum
Click Image to Zoom. There are promising detection techniques across the entire gravitational wave spectrum, which is populated by a broad range of astrophysical sources. The spectrum in the region probed by LISA is one of the most interesting, populated by a rich diversity in astrophysical phenomena of interest to astronomers and astrophysicists.

A Different Frequency Range from Different Objects

The gravitational wave spectrum covers a broad span of frequencies. LISA operates in the low frequency range, between 0.1 mHz and 1 Hz (compared to LIGO's frequency of 10 Hz to 1000 Hz). The difference means that the waves LISA is looking for have a much longer wavelength, corresponding to objects in much wider orbits and potentially much heavier than those that LIGO is searching for, opening up the detection realm to a wider range of gravitational wave sources.

LISA has three spacecraft that form an equilateral triangle in space where the sides of the triangle, also called LISA's "arms", extend about a million miles. Therefore, from space, LISA can avoid the noise from Earth and access regions of the spectrum that are inaccessible from Earth due to these extremely long arms. The gravitational wave sources that LISA would discover include ultra-compact binaries in our Galaxy, supermassive black hole mergers, and extreme mass ratio inspirals, among other exotic possibilities.

The Entire Spectrum

We aim to study the entire gravitational wave spectrum, covering a range of gravitational wave sources using experiments on



WHAT is LISA?

LISA is a space-based gravitational wave detector constructed of three spacecraft separated by millions of miles.

LISA's enormous detector size and orbit, trailing behind the Earth as it orbits the Sun, are illustrated here. Credit: AEI/Milde Marketing

LISA's Size and Precision are Out of this World

LISA consists of three spacecraft that are separated by millions of miles and trailing tens of millions of miles, more than one hundred times the distance to the Moon, behind the Earth as we orbit the Sun. These three spacecraft relay laser beams back and forth between the different spacecraft and the signals are combined to search for gravitational wave signatures that come from distortions of spacetime. We need a giant detector bigger than the size of Earth to catch gravitational waves from orbiting black holes hundreds of millions of times more massive than our sun. NASA is a major collaborator in the European Space Agency (ESA)-led mission, which is scheduled to launch in the early 2030s and we are getting ready for it now!


How does LISA Detect Gravitational Waves?

Gravitational wave events will cause the three LISA spacecraft to shift slightly with respect to each other.

LISA laser beam
Click Image To Zoom. LISA will observe a passing gravitational wave directly by measuring the tiny changes in distance between freely falling proof masses inside spacecraft with its high precision measurement system. Credit: AEI/MM/exozet

Catching Waves

A bit like the objects moving on the surface of a pond produce ripples and waves, massive objects moving in space distort the fabric of spacetime and produce gravitational waves. Some of these gravitational wave events will cause the three LISA spacecraft to shift slightly with respect to each other, as they "ride the gravitational waves", to produce a characteristic pattern in the combined laser beam signal that depends on the location and physical properties of the source.

LISA is Extremely High Precision

These signals are extremely small and require a very sensitive instrument to detect. For example, LISA aims to measure relative shifts in position that are less than the diameter of a helium nucleus over a distance of a million miles, or in technical terms: a strain of 1 part in 1020 at frequencies of about a millihertz.

The LISA Pathfinder Mission was a proof-of-concept mission to test and prove the technology needed for LISA's success.


What is LISA Pathfinder?

LISA Pathfinder Mission was a proof-of-concept mission for LISA.

lisa pathfinder artists impression
Click Image to Zoom. LISA Pathfinder operated from a vantage point in space about 1.5 million km from Earth towards the Sun, orbiting the first Sun-Earth Lagrangian point, L1. Credit: ESA - C.Carreau

LISA Pathfinder Exceeded Expectations

LISA Pathfinder was launched on December 3, 2015 as a proof-of-concept that tests that the noise characteristics of free-floating test masses within the spacecraft are small enough compared to an expected gravitational wave signal. Completing its mission in July, 2017, LISA Pathfinder has shown that the low noise levels surpassed the original requirements, demonstrating that key technology for LISA is well underway.


lisa pathfinder characteristics
View/Download: 1500px Full Screen | 3508px Full Screen

This plot shows the primary result from LISA Pathfinder's year and a half of science operations. The plot shows the measured level of imperfection from pure free-fall of the two gold-platinum test masses. The solid and hatched shaded areas show the designed level of performance for LISA Pathfinder and LISA respectively. The blue trace shows the preliminary result from Pathfinder, which was obtained just two months after science operations began. The red trace shows the final result, obtained in February 2017 after the instrument was tuned to improve performance. These measurements demonstrate that the technology developed for Pathfinder can be used as the basis for LISA's detection of gravitational waves.
Credit: ESA/LISA Pathfinder Collaboration.

Related Articles

What is LIGO?

LIGO is a ground-based observatory that first detected gravitational waves.

LIGO Detections
Click Image to Zoom. With their first few detections, LIGO and VIRGO have made significant contributions to our understanding of black holes and neutron stars. This graphic shows the masses for black holes detected through electromagnetic observations (purple); the black holes measured by gravitational-wave observations (blue); neutron stars measured with electromagnetic observations (yellow); and the masses of the neutron stars that merged in an event called GW170817, which were detected in gravitational waves (orange). The remnant of GW170817 is unclassified, and labeled as a question mark. Details/Credit: LIGO-Virgo/Frank Elavsky/Northwestern University.

Opening the Gravitational Wave Window

On September 14, 2015, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO), a ground-based gravitational wave observatory, made history by detecting the first gravitational waves from the merger of two stellar mass black holes. Since then, LIGO and its European counterpart VIRGO, have announced the detection of several additional black hole systems as well as a neutron star merger which also produced light detected by dozens of telescopes on ground and in space. This represents nothing less than the birth of an entirely new field of astronomy.

aerial view of LIGO
Click Image to Zoom. The LIGO Laboratory operates two detector sites, one near Hanford in eastern Washington, and another near Livingston, Louisiana. This photo shows the Livingston detector site. Credit: LIGO/Caltech

Ground Based vs Space Based

As LIGO, VIRGO, and other ground-based detectors increase their sensitivity, the number and quality of black hole and neutron star merger events observed will increase. New kinds of events, such as nearby supernovae, may be detected as well. However, there are some gravitational wave sources that are not detectable by even the most advanced ground-based detectors. Gravitational Waves at very low frequencies have wavelengths larger than the Earth itself. Deploying an antenna large enough to efficiently detect them requires going to space. LISA's three spacecraft will create an equilateral triangle in space and the paths between each pair of spacecraft, referred to as LISA's arms, will extend millions of miles. By measuring distance changes in these arms caused by passing gravitational waves, LISA will be able to measure their amplitude, direction and polarization. Astronomers will use this information to learn about the sources in this previously-unexplored region of the gravitational wave spectrum.



Who's Involved?

Led by ESA, the project is a collaboration of ESA, NASA, and the global scientific community.

ESA and NASA logos

The European Space Agency (ESA) is leading the LISA mission. Together with NASA and an international consortium of scientists, the project brings together global expertise in gravitational wave detection.

What is NASA's Role?

NASA supports both ESA and the LISA Consortium as a collaborative partner providing science and engineering expertise, technology development, and interface with the U.S. research community. This includes development of enabling technologies, systems engineering support, prototyping of ground segment and data analysis infrastructure, and research in LISA-related astrophysics.

NASA is directly supporting the development of five key technologies for possible contribution to the ESA-led LISA mission. LISA Telescope and laser systems are being developed at the Goddard Space Flight Center; a phase measurement system and precision micropropulsion system are being developed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory; and a Charge Management System is being developed by the University of Florida under an award from NASA. The NASA LISA Study Office is coordinating this suite of development activities and managing interfaces with European partners.

How to Get Involved

neutron star merger simulation of gravitational waves
Click Image to Zoom. Numerical simulation of the gravitational waves emitted during the merger of two neutron stars into a black hole. Credit: Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics. More Info

For Scientists


Education and Outreach Resources

Links to gravitational wave education resources for teachers and students.


Citizen Science Projects