LIGO Document P1300086-v27

Methods and results of a search for gravitational waves associated with gamma-ray bursts using the GEO 600, LIGO, and Virgo detectors

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LIGO-P1300086-v27
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P - Publications
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LIGO-P1300086-v28
27 Jun 2014, 12:09
LIGO-P1300086-v25
15 May 2014, 07:27
Abstract:
In this paper we report on a search for gravitational waves (GWs) in the frequency range 64 Hz– 1792 Hz associated with gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), using data from GEO 600 and one of the LIGO or Virgo detectors. We introduce the method of a linear search grid to analyse GRB events with large sky localisation uncertainties, for example the localisations provided by the Fermi Gamma- ray Burst Monitor (GBM). Coherent searches for GWs can be computationally intensive when the GRB sky position is not well-localised, due to the corrections required for the difference in arrival time between detectors. Using a linear search grid we are able to reduce the computational cost of the analysis by a factor of O(10) for GBM events. Furthermore, we demonstrate that our analysis pipeline can improve upon the sky localisation of GRBs detected by the GBM, if a high-frequency GW signal is observed in coincidence. We use this method in a search for GWs associated with 129 GRBs observed satellite-based gamma-ray experiments between 2006 and 2011. A fraction of our GRB events are analysed using data from GEO 600 while the detector was using squeezed-light states to improve its sensitivity; this is the first search for GWs using data from a squeezed-light interferometric observatory. We find no evidence for GW signals, either with any individual GRB in this sample or with the population as a whole. For each GRB we place lower bounds on the distance to the progenitor, under an assumption of a fixed GW emission energy of 10−2 M⊙c2, with a median exclusion distance of 0.8 Mpc for emission at 500 Hz and 0.3 Mpc at 1 kHz. The reduced computational cost associated with a linear search grid will enable rapid searches for GWs associated with Fermi GBM events once the Advanced LIGO and Virgo detectors begin operation.
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Publication Information:
ArXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/1405.1053
Science Summary: http://www.ligo.org/science/Publication-GEOGRB/

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