1 / 9

Stochastic Background Search with VIRGO and GEO

4th ILIAS-GW Annual General Meeting Tuebingen , 8th and 9th October, 2007. Stochastic Background Search with VIRGO and GEO. G. Cella – INFN Pisa & VIRGO. Introduction. LSC and Virgo entered a data-sharing arrangement in Spring, 2007. Virgo VSR1 is just ended (October 1 st ).

micheal
Download Presentation

Stochastic Background Search with VIRGO and GEO

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 4th ILIAS-GW Annual General MeetingTuebingen, 8th and 9th October, 2007 Stochastic Background Search with VIRGO and GEO G. Cella – INFN Pisa & VIRGO

  2. Introduction LSC and Virgo entered a data-sharing arrangement in Spring, 2007. Virgo VSR1 is just ended (October 1st ). • review of projected sensitivities to an isotropic stochastic background (with Virgo at design sensitivity) which have been reported in conjunction with a joint analysis of simulated data. • analysis that can be performed using the current data, taken in coincidence during LIGO’s 5th and Virgo’s 1st Science Run. • few considerations about targeted search Credits: C.N. Colacino, E. Cuoco, A. Di Virgilio, S. Mitra, T. Regimbau,E.L. Robinson, B.F. Whiting and J.T. Whelan

  3. Stochastic background search in a slide A stochastic background can be defined by the correlation it generates between two detectors: Overlap reduction function: the coherence between the detectors: SNR can be parametrized in the following way: In terms of a sensitivity integrand:

  4. Overlap reduction functions for the LSC/Virgo network The “envelope factor”: • LLO-LHO are 3× closer than LLO-Virgo and LHO Virgo pair • In spite of that projection effects make LIGO-Virgo pairs more favorable at higher frequencies.

  5. Stochastic sensitivity integrand at design H means here H1+H2 Pair H1-H2 not considered L-V and H-V pairs enhance network above 200 Hz. G-H and G-L don’t help as much because GEO is less sensitive But G-V adds to full network.

  6. Software injections: results Error bars = 1 Magnetar spectrum scaled up so detectable in 24 hr Signal recovered at a reasonable level in all pairs GWDAW proc arXiv:0704.2983 accepted by CQG Injection of a simulated magnetar spectrum.

  7. Sensitivity integrand: S5/VSR1 Including Virgo-LIGO pairs in the analysis now (S5/VSR1) can make a significant impact at high frequencies. the short-term benefit is modest (a slight improvement on the limit set with S4 LLO-ALLEGRO measurements) it will give us practical experience to be applied when Virgo achieves design sensitivity and lower frequencies [200 Hz,400 Hz] become accessible.

  8. Point source: RMS overlap reduction function The RMS amplitude is frequency independent Average over the sidereal time Depends on the declination LHO-LLO most sensitive except near poles Coherent network analysis should be investigated, but no qualitatively different results expected.  Δt 3000km Idea: use interference to “point” the network to a target. Basic observable:

  9. Conclusions • Despite their geographical separation, projection effects make LLO-Virgo and LHO-Virgo pairs more favorable for higher-frequency stochastic GW correlations than LLO-LHO. • Once Virgo achieves its design sensitivity, it will add significantly to the sensitivity of the global network to an isotropic stochastic background with support above 200 Hz. • Analysis of simulated data has illustrated the practical application of this method. • The Virgo-GEO pair can likewise play a significant role at these frequencies. • In the current run (S5 for LIGO; VSR1 for Virgo), the frequencies at which Virgo is closest to its design sensitivity are higher that those targeted in the simulation. • LIGO-Virgo pairs can make an immediate impact above 800 Hz, and the LSC & Virgo plan to perform a joint cross-correlation analysis to improve limits at these frequencies. • The experience gained will also be of use in subsequent observations at the frequencies which will become available with future improvements in Virgo sensitivity. [1] G. C. Cella et al, accepted by CQG; arXiv:0704.2983 [2] A. Lazzarini & R. Weiss, LIGO-T950018-02-E. S5 Sens LIGO-G070366-00-E. http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/jzweizig/distribution/LSC Data/ [3]M Punturo, VIR-NOT-PER-1390-51, Issue 10 (2004). http://www.virgo.infn.it/senscurve/ [4] GEO-600 theor noise budget, v4.0 w/250 Hz detuning. GEO-600 typical S5 Night & Weekend sensitivity. http://www.geo600.uni-hannover.de/geocurves/ [5] Virgo Calibration & Reconstruction Webpage, http://wwwcascina.virgo.infn.it/DataAnalysis/Calibration/ [6] B. Abbott et al (LSC), to appear in PRD; gr-qc/0703068

More Related