5 research outputs found
SEARCH FOR GRAVITATIONAL-WAVE BURSTS ASSOCIATED WITH GAMMA-RAY BURSTS USING DATA FROM LIGO SCIENCE RUN 5 AND VIRGO SCIENCE RUN 1
We present the results of a search for gravitational-wave bursts associated
with 137 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) that were detected by satellite-based
gamma-ray experiments during the fifth LIGO science run and first Virgo science
run. The data used in this analysis were collected from 2005 November 4 to 2007
October 1, and most of the GRB triggers were from the Swift satellite. The
search uses a coherent network analysis method that takes into account the
different locations and orientations of the interferometers at the three
LIGO-Virgo sites. We find no evidence for gravitational-wave burst signals
associated with this sample of GRBs. Using simulated short-duration (<1 s)
waveforms, we set upper limits on the amplitude of gravitational waves
associated with each GRB. We also place lower bounds on the distance to each
GRB under the assumption of a fixed energy emission in gravitational waves,
with typical limits of D ~ 15 Mpc (E_GW^iso / 0.01 M_o c^2)^1/2 for emission at
frequencies around 150 Hz, where the LIGO-Virgo detector network has best
sensitivity. We present astrophysical interpretations and implications of these
results, and prospects for corresponding searches during future LIGO-Virgo
runs.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures. Updated references. To appear in ApJ
An upper limit on the stochastic gravitational-wave background of cosmological origin
A stochastic background of gravitational waves is expected to arise from a superposition of a large number of unresolved gravitational-wave sources of astrophysical and cosmological origin. It should carry unique signatures from the earliest epochs in the evolution of the Universe, inaccessible to standard astrophysical observations. Direct measurements of the amplitude of this background are therefore of fundamental importance for understanding the evolution of the Universe when it was younger than one minute. Here we report limits on the amplitude of the stochastic gravitational-wave background using the data from a two-year science run of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO). Our result constrains the energy density of the stochastic gravitational-wave background normalized by the critical energy density of the Universe, in the frequency band around 100 Hz, to be <6.9 times 10-6 at 95% confidence. The data rule out models of early Universe evolution with relatively large equation-of-state parameter, as well as cosmic (super)string models with relatively small string tension that are favoured in some string theory models. This search for the stochastic background improves on the indirect limits from Big Bang nucleosynthesis and cosmic microwave background at 100 Hz
