3 research outputs found
Advanced Virgo Plus. Future perspectives
While completing the commissioning phase to prepare the Virgo interferometer for the next joint Observation Run (O4), the Virgo collaboration is also finalizing the design of the next upgrades to the detector to be employed in the following Observation Run (O5). The major upgrade will concern decreasing the thermal noise limit, which will imply using very large test masses and increased laser beam size. But this will not be the only upgrade to be implemented in the break between the O4 and O5 observation runs to increase the Virgo detector strain sensitivity. The paper will cover the challenges linked to this upgrade and implications on the detector’s reach and observational potential, reflecting the talk given at 12th Cosmic Ray International Seminar - CRIS 2022 held in September 2022 in Napoli
Heavy flavour decay muon production at forward rapidity in proton–proton collisions at s=7 TeV
AbstractThe production of muons from heavy flavour decays is measured at forward rapidity in proton–proton collisions at s=7 TeV collected with the ALICE experiment at the LHC. The analysis is carried out on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity Lint=16.5 nb−1. The transverse momentum and rapidity differential production cross sections of muons from heavy flavour decays are measured in the rapidity range 2.5<y<4, over the transverse momentum range 2<pt<12 GeV/c. The results are compared to predictions based on perturbative QCD calculations
Low-latency Gravitational-wave Alerts for Multimessenger Astronomy during the Second Advanced LIGO and Virgo Observing Run
Advanced LIGO's second observing run (O2), conducted from November 30, 2016
to August 25, 2017, combined with Advanced Virgo's first observations in August
2017 witnessed the birth of gravitational-wave multi-messenger astronomy. The
first ever gravitational-wave detection from the coalescence of two neutron
stars, GW170817, and its gamma-ray counterpart, GRB 170817A, led to an
electromagnetic follow-up of the event at an unprecedented scale. Several teams
from across the world searched for EM/neutrino counterparts to GW170817, paving
the way for the discovery of optical, X-ray, and radio counterparts. In this
article, we describe the online identification of gravitational-wave transients
and the distribution of gravitational-wave alerts by the LIGO and Virgo
collaborations during O2. We also describe the gravitational-wave observables
which were sent in the alerts to enable searches for their counterparts.
Finally, we give an overview of the online candidate alerts shared with
observing partners during O2. Alerts were issued for 14 candidates, six of
which have been confirmed as gravitational-wave events associated with the
merger of black holes or neutron stars. Eight of the 14 alerts were issued less
than an hour after data acquisition.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
