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LISA - Laser Interferometer Space Antenna
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This is an artists concept showing gravitational waves.

Gravity is talking. LISA will listen.

The Cosmos sings with many strong gravitational voices , causing ripples in the fabric of space and time that carry the message of tremendous astronomical events: the rapid dances of closely orbiting stellar remnants, the mergers of massive black holes millions of times heavier than the Sun, the aftermath of the Big Bang. These ripples are the gravitational waves predicted by Albert Einstein's 1915 general relativity ; nearly one century later, it is now possible to detect them. Gravitational waves will give us an entirely new way to observe and understand the Universe, enhancing and complementing the insights of conventional astronomy.

LISA, the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna , is a joint NASA–ESA mission to observe astrophysical and cosmological sources of gravitational waves of low frequencies (0.03 mHz to 0.1 Hz, corresponding to oscillation periods of about 10 hours to 10 seconds). This frequency band contains the emission from massive black-hole binaries that form after galactic mergers; the song of compact stellar remnants as they slowly spiral to their final fate in the black holes at the centers of galaxies; the chorus of millions of compact binaries in our own Galaxy; and possibly the faint whispers of waves generated shortly after the Big Bang .

LISA consists of three identical spacecraft flying in a triangular constellation, with equal arms of 5 million kilometers each. As gravitational waves from distant sources reach LISA, they warp space-time, stretching and compressing the triangle. Thus, by precisely monitoring the separation between the spacecraft , we can measure the waves; and by studying the shape and timing of the waves we can learn about the nature and evolution of the systems that emitted them.



LISA is an extraordinarily original and technically bold mission concept. LISA will open up an entirely new way of observing the Universe, with immense potential to enlarge our understanding of physics and astronomy in unforeseen ways.

( National Academy of Sciences , NASA's Beyond Einstein Program: an Architecture for implementation, 2007.)
Science title
LISA will unveil the dark side of the Universe by observing thousands of gravitational-wave sources.
Mission title
LISA will detect gravitational waves by accurately monitoring the separation between three widely separated spacecraft.
Technology title
LISA will employ laser interferometry and drag-free operation to measure the distances between freely-falling test masses protected by the spacecraft.


May 8, 2009: a new lisa.nasa.gov !

Upcoming: 8th International LISA Symposium , Stanford, June 28-July 2, 2010