2020
			
	    
	
	
    A Galactic centre gravitational-wave Messenger
ABRAMOWICZ, Marek; Michal BEJGER; Eric GOURGOULHON and Odele STRAUBBasic information
Original name
A Galactic centre gravitational-wave Messenger
	Authors
ABRAMOWICZ, Marek (616 Poland, belonging to the institution); Michal BEJGER; Eric GOURGOULHON and Odele STRAUB (756 Switzerland)
			Edition
 SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 2045-2322
			Other information
Language
English
		Type of outcome
Article in a journal
		Field of Study
10300 1.3 Physical sciences
		Country of publisher
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
		Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
		References:
Impact factor
Impact factor: 4.380
			RIV identification code
RIV/47813059:19630/20:A0000028
		Organization unit
Institute of physics in Opava
			UT WoS
000530731300028
		EID Scopus
2-s2.0-85084005238
		Keywords in English
STARS
		Tags
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
		Links
GA17-16287S, research and development project. 
			
				
				Changed: 23/3/2021 20:41, Mgr. Pavlína Jalůvková
				
		Abstract
In the original language
Our existence in the Universe resulted from a rare combination of circumstances. The same must hold for any highly developed extraterrestrial civilisation, and if they have ever existed in the Milky Way, they would likely be scattered over large distances in space and time. However, all technologically advanced species must be aware of the unique property of the galactic centre: it hosts Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the closest supermassive black hole to anyone in the Galaxy. A civilisation with sufficient technical know-how may have placed material in orbit around Sgr A* for research, energy extraction, and communication purposes. In either case, its orbital motion will necessarily be a source of gravitational waves. We show that a Jupiter-mass probe on the retrograde innermost stable circular orbit around Sgr A* emits, depending on the black hole spin, at a frequency of f(GW)=0.63-1.07 mHz and with a power of P-GW=2.7x10(36)-2.0x10(37)erg/s. We discuss that the energy output of a single star is sufficient to stabilise the location of an orbiting probe for a billion years against gravitational wave induced orbital decay. Placing and sustaining a device near Sgr A* is therefore astrophysically possible. Such a probe will emit an unambiguously artificial continuous gravitational wave signal that is observable with LISA-type detectors.