In this talk, I will give a brief overview of gravitational-wave astronomy, introducing pulsar timing arrays and space-borne detection, before concentrating on ground-based detectors and Advanced LIGO. While both pulsar timing arrays and space-borne detectors are most sensitive to the mergers of supermassive black holes, ground-based detectors are sensitive to stellar-mass systems. Binary neutron stars are anticipated to be the main source for Advanced LIGO, and I will discuss what we hope to learn from these observations; in particular, the expected accuracy of mass and position measurements for any observations in 2015. The latter is particularly important when searching for an electromagnetic counterpart to the gravitational-wave signal, which may help us understand the origins of short gamma-ray bursts. While mass measurements can be precise, position measurements have large uncertainties, which will make combining electromagnetic and gravitational-wave observations challenging.
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