3,048 research outputs found
Electromagnetic follow-up of gravitational wave transient signal candidates
Pioneering efforts aiming at the development of multi-messenger gravitational
wave and electromagnetic astronomy have been made. An electromagnetic
observation follow-up program of candidate gravitational wave events has been
performed (Dec 17 2009 to Jan 8 2010 and Sep 4 to Oct 20 2010) during the
recent runs of the LIGO and Virgo gravitational wave detectors. It involved
ground-based and space electromagnetic facilities observing the sky at optical,
X-ray and radio wavelengths. The joint gravitational wave and electromagnetic
observation study requires the development of specific image analysis
procedures able to discriminate the possible electromagnetic counterpart of
gravitational wave triggers from contaminant/background events. The paper
presents an overview of the electromagnetic follow-up program and the image
analysis procedures.Comment: Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on "Topics in
Astroparticle and Underground Physics" (TAUP 2011), Munich, September 2011
(to appear in IoP Journal of Physics: Conference Series
Enhancing gravitational wave astronomy with galaxy catalogues
Joint gravitational wave (GW) and electromagnetic (EM) observations, as a key
research direction in multi-messenger astronomy, will provide deep insight into
the astrophysics of a vast range of astronomical phenomena. Uncertainties in
the source sky location estimate from gravitational wave observations mean
follow-up observatories must scan large portions of the sky for a potential
companion signal. A general frame of joint GW-EM observations is presented by a
multi-messenger observational triangle. Using a Bayesian approach to
multi-messenger astronomy, we investigate the use of galaxy catalogue and host
galaxy information to reduce the sky region over which follow-up observatories
must scan, as well as study its use for improving the inclination angle
estimates for coalescing binary compact objects. We demonstrate our method
using a simulated neutron stars inspiral signal injected into simulated
Advanced detectors noise and estimate the injected signal sky location and
inclination angle using the Gravitational Wave Galaxy Catalogue. In this case
study, the top three candidates in rank have , and posterior
probability of being the host galaxy, receptively. The standard deviation of
cosine inclination angle (0.001) of the neutron stars binary using
gravitational wave-galaxy information is much smaller than that (0.02) using
only gravitational wave posterior samples.Comment: Proceedings of the Sant Cugat Forum on Astrophysics. 2014 Session on
'Gravitational Wave Astrophysics
An all-sky search algorithm for continuous gravitational waves from spinning neutron stars in binary systems
Rapidly spinning neutron stars with non-axisymmetric mass distributions are
expected to generate quasi-monochromatic continuous gravitational waves. While
many searches for unknown, isolated spinning neutron stars have been carried
out, there have been no previous searches for unknown sources in binary
systems. Since current search methods for unknown, isolated neutron stars are
already computationally limited, expanding the parameter space searched to
include binary systems is a formidable challenge. We present a new hierarchical
binary search method called TwoSpect, which exploits the periodic orbital
modulations of the continuous waves by searching for patterns in doubly
Fourier-transformed data. We will describe the TwoSpect search pipeline,
including its mitigation of detector noise variations and corrections for
Doppler frequency modulation caused by changing detector velocity. Tests on
Gaussian noise and on a set of simulated signals will be presented.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, Submitted to Classical and Quantum
Gravit
A "kilonova" associated with short-duration gamma-ray burst 130603B
Short-duration gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs) are intense flashes of cosmic
gamma-rays, lasting less than ~2 s, whose origin is one of the great unsolved
questions of astrophysics today. While the favoured hypothesis for their
production, a relativistic jet created by the merger of two compact stellar
objects (specifically, two neutron stars, NS-NS, or a neutron star and a black
hole, NS-BH), is supported by indirect evidence such as their host galaxy
properties, unambiguous confirmation of the model is still lacking. Mergers of
this kind are also expected to create significant quantities of neutron-rich
radioactive species, whose decay should result in a faint transient in the days
following the burst, a so-called "kilonova". Indeed, it is speculated that this
mechanism may be the predominant source of stable r-process elements in the
Universe. Recent calculations suggest much of the kilonova energy should appear
in the near-infrared (nIR) due to the high optical opacity created by these
heavy r-process elements. Here we report strong evidence for such an event
accompanying SGRB 130603B. If this simplest interpretation of the data is
correct, it provides (i) support for the compact object merger hypothesis of
SGRBs, (ii) confirmation that such mergers are likely sites of significant
r-process production and (iii) quite possibly an alternative, un-beamed
electromagnetic signature of the most promising sources for direct detection of
gravitational waves.Comment: preprint of paper appearing in Nature (3 Aug 2013
A blind hierarchical coherent search for gravitational-wave signals from coalescing compact binaries in a network of interferometric detectors
We describe a hierarchical data analysis pipeline for coherently searching
for gravitational wave (GW) signals from non-spinning compact binary
coalescences (CBCs) in the data of multiple earth-based detectors. It assumes
no prior information on the sky position of the source or the time of
occurrence of its transient signals and, hence, is termed "blind". The pipeline
computes the coherent network search statistic that is optimal in stationary,
Gaussian noise, and allows for the computation of a suite of alternative
statistics and signal-based discriminators that can improve its performance in
real data. Unlike the coincident multi-detector search statistics employed so
far, the coherent statistics are different in the sense that they check for the
consistency of the signal amplitudes and phases in the different detectors with
their different orientations and with the signal arrival times in them. The
first stage of the hierarchical pipeline constructs coincidences of triggers
from the multiple interferometers, by requiring their proximity in time and
component masses. The second stage follows up on these coincident triggers by
computing the coherent statistics. The performance of the hierarchical coherent
pipeline on Gaussian data is shown to be better than the pipeline with just the
first (coincidence) stage.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Classical and
Quantum Gravit
Localizing gravitational wave sources with optical telescopes and combining electromagnetic and gravitational wave data
Neutron star binaries, which are among the most promising sources for the
direct detection of gravitational waves (GW) by ground based detectors, are
also potential electromagnetic (EM) emitters. Gravitational waves will provide
a new window to observe these events and hopefully give us glimpses of new
astrophysics. In this paper, we discuss how EM information of these events can
considerably improve GW parameter estimation both in terms of accuracy and
computational power requirement. And then in return how GW sky localization can
help EM astronomers in follow-up studies of sources which did not yield any
prompt emission. We discuss how both EM source information and GW source
localization can be used in a framework of multi-messenger astronomy. We
illustrate how the large error regions in GW sky localizations can be handled
in conducting optical astronomy in the advance detector era. We show some
preliminary results in the context of an array of optical telescopes called
BlackGEM, dedicated for optical follow-up of GW triggers, that is being
constructed in La Silla, Chile and is expected to operate concurrent to the
advanced GW detectors.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Proceeding for Sant Cugat Forum for Astrophysic
Train Like an Astronaut Educational Outreach
In an effort to reduce the incidence of childhood obesity, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), capitalizing on the theme of human spaceflight developed two educational outreach programs for children ages 8-12. To motivate young "fit explorers," the Train Like an Astronaut National (TLA) program and the Mission X: Train Like an Astronaut International Fitness Challenge (MX) were created. Based on the astronauts' physical training, these programs consist of activities developed by educators and experts in the areas of space life sciences and fitness. These Activities address components of physical fitness. The educational content hopes to promote students to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields. At the national level, in partnership with First Lady Michelle Obama's Let?s Move! Initiative, the TLA program consists of 10 physical and 2 educational activities. The program encourages families, schools, and communities to work collaboratively in order to reinforce in children and their families the importance of healthy lifestyle habits In contrast, the MX challenge is a cooperative outreach program involving numerous space agencies and other international partner institutions. During the six-week period, teams of students from around the world are challenged to improve their physical fitness and collectively accumulate points by completing 18 core activities. During the 2011 pilot year, a t otal of 137 teams and more than 4,000 students from 12 countries participated in the event. MX will be implemented within 24 countries during the 2012 challenge. It is projected that 7,000 children will "train like an astronaut"
Nasal carriage of Staphylococcus aureus in dairy sheep.
International audienceThe purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of Staphylococcus aureus nasal carriage of dairy sheep in farms producing cheeses manufactured with raw ewe's milk. The study showed that 29% of ewes carried S. aureus in their nares. The genetic diversity of the 136 isolates recovered from the anterior nares of the ewes, from the ambient air of the milking parlour and from cheeses was investigated using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of DNA SmaI digests. The genotyping results showed that 75 out of 106 isolates recovered from nasal carriage in dairy sheep belonged to a dominant pattern (previously named OV) and a genetically related pattern (named OV'). The same profile (OV or OV') was found in the ambient air and cheeses, suggesting a continuum between isolates within these different compartments
Advanced technologies for future ground-based, laser-interferometric gravitational wave detectors
We present a review of modern optical techniques being used and developed for the field of gravitational wave detection. We describe the current state-of-the-art of gravitational waves detector technologies with regard to optical layouts, suspensions and test masses. We discuss the dominant sources and noise in each of these subsystems and the developments that will help mitigate them for future generations of detectors. We very briefly summarise some of the novel astrophysics that will be possible with these upgraded detectors
A coherent triggered search for single spin compact binary coalescences in gravitational wave data
In this paper we present a method for conducting a coherent search for single
spin compact binary coalescences in gravitational wave data and compare this
search to the existing coincidence method for single spin searches. We propose
a method to characterize the regions of the parameter space where the single
spin search, both coincident and coherent, will increase detection efficiency
over the existing non-precessing search. We also show example results of the
coherent search on a stretch of data from LIGO's fourth science run but note
that a set of signal based vetoes will be needed before this search can be run
to try to make detections.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
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