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  5. IndIGO-D: probing compact binary coalescences in the Decihertz GW Band
 
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IndIGO-D: probing compact binary coalescences in the Decihertz GW Band

Source
arXiv
ISSN
2331-8422
Date Issued
2026-01-01
Author(s)
Sharma, Abhishek
Tahelyani, Divya
Sengupta, Anand S.  
Mitra, Sanjit
DOI
10.48550/arXiv.2601.06956
Abstract
We study IndIGO-D, a decihertz gravitational-wave mission concept, focusing on a specific configuration in which three spacecraft fly in formation to form an L-shaped interferometer in a heliocentric orbit. The two orthogonal arms share a common vertex, providing a space-based analogue of terrestrial Michelson detectors, while operating in an optimised configuration that yields ppm-level arm-length stability. Assuming 1000 km arm length, we analyse the orbital motion and antenna response, and assess sensitivity across the [0.1 - 10] Hz band bridging LISA and next-generation ground-based interferometers. Using fiducial sensitivity curves provided by the IndIGO-D collaboration, we compute horizon distances for different source classes. Intermediate-mass black-hole binaries with masses 10^{2} - 10^{3} \, M_\odot are detectable to redshifts z \sim 10^{3}, complementing the reach of LISA and terrestrial detectors. Binary neutron star systems are observable to a horizon distance of z \lesssim 0.3, allowing continuous multi-band coverage with Voyager-class interferometers from the decihertz regime to merger. A Bayesian parameter-estimation study of a GW170817-like binary shows that the sky localization area improves from \sim 21 \,\mathrm{deg}^2 at one month to 0.3 \,\mathrm{deg}^2 at six hours pre-merger! These sky areas are readily tiled by wide-field time-domain telescopes such as the Rubin Observatory, whose 9.6 \,\mathrm{deg}^2 field of view and r-band depth enable high-cadence, repeated coverage of GW170817-like kilonovae at this distance and beyond. IndIGO-D exploits the rapid evolution of binaries in the decihertz band to bridge the gap between millihertz and terrestrial observations, enabling early warnings on timescales from months to hours and enhancing the prospects for multi-band and multi-messenger discoveries.
URI
https://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/IITG2025/33982
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