LIGO Document G2301183-v1
- The third observing run of Advanced LIGO and Virgo (O3) took place from
 April 1st, 2019 to September 30th, 2019, and from November 1st, 2019 to March
 27th, 2020. The multi-messenger astronomy efforts during O3 included conducting
 gravitational-wave follow-up searches to electromagnetic burst sources, specifically
 Gamma-Ray Bursts, Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs), and magnetar x-ray bursts. The
 overarching goal of the research described in this dissertation is to improve the
 sensitivity of the LIGO burst searches in the third observing run, and to expand on
 our data analysis methods for the next observing run.
 Magnetars are highly magnetized neutron stars with intermittent x-ray
 bursting behavior. We present a gravitational-wave follow-up search on the
 magnetar bursts from O3. This is an expansion on a similar search that was done
 in the second observing run (O2), and we present the differences in search methods
 and their effects. We place the most stringent upper limits on gravitational wave
 energy of any gravitational-wave search to date, and while these upper limits are
 still not low enough to be astrophysically meaningful, they do provide a framework
 for future searches.
 FRBs are short-duration, bright bursts of radio signal from far outside Milky
 Way galaxy. We conduct the first-ever search for unmodeled gravitational-wave
 transients coincident with FRBs detected by the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity
 Mapping Experiment, the largest population of FRBs detected so far. We search
 over both repeating and non-repeating FRBs. Although we find no evidence for a
 signal, the study does lay the groundwork for future FRB searches from sources
 within our detection radius.
 A stacked search in which multiple triggers are analyzed simultaneously is
 motivated by a number of very marginal triggers in the O3 magnetar search. We
 develop a version of an existing LIGO burst pipeline that can perform a stacked
 analysis. We describe the methods, and demonstrate a reduction in the root-sum-
 squared strain that an unstacked event would need to have if it were to be detected
 in a stacked analysis with a specific p-value. We also present sensitivity studies to
 determine how to optimize our pipeline.
 
 
 
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