1 Testing coherent code for coalescing binaries network analysis Simona Birindelli INFN Pisa, Università di Pisa Leone B. Bosi INFN Perugia, Università.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
S3/S4 BBH report Thomas Cokelaer LSC Meeting, Boston, 3-4 June 2006.
Advertisements

A walk through some statistic details of LSC results.
GWDAW 11 - Potsdam, 19/12/ Coincidence analysis between periodic source candidates in C6 and C7 Virgo data C.Palomba (INFN Roma) for the Virgo Collaboration.
GWDAW 16/12/2004 Inspiral analysis of the Virgo commissioning run 4 Leone B. Bosi VIRGO coalescing binaries group on behalf of the VIRGO collaboration.
Adaptive Hough transform for the search of periodic sources P. Astone, S. Frasca, C. Palomba Universita` di Roma “La Sapienza” and INFN Roma Talk outline.
G.A.Prodi - INFN and Università di Trento, Italy International Gravitational Event Collaboration igec.lnl.infn.it ALLEGRO group:ALLEGRO (LSU)
A Search for Point Sources of High Energy Neutrinos with AMANDA-B10 Scott Young, for the AMANDA collaboration UC-Irvine PhD Thesis:
C&A 10April06 1 Point Source Detection and Localization Using the UW HealPixel database Toby Burnett University of Washington.
Parameter Estimation Using 3.5 post-Newtonian Inspiral Waveforms GWDAW, December 15-18, 2004, Annecy K. Arun, B.R. Iyer, B.S. Sathyaprakash and P. Sundarajan.
Brennan Ireland Rochester Institute of Technology Astrophysical Sciences and Technology December 5, 2013 LIGO: Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave.
LIGO-G Z Coherent Coincident Analysis of LIGO Burst Candidates Laura Cadonati Massachusetts Institute of Technology LIGO Scientific Collaboration.
Results from TOBAs Results from TOBAs Cross correlation analysis to search for a Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background University of Tokyo Ayaka Shoda.
Cavalier Fabien on behalf LAL group Orsay GWDAW 10 December, 14 th 2005 Reconstruction of Source Location using the Virgo-LIGO network Presentation of.
1/25 Current results and future scenarios for gravitational wave’s stochastic background G. Cella – INFN sez. Pisa.
Hierarchical Search for MBH mergers in Mock LISA data  Search for tracks in time-frequency plane; get first estimates of chirp mass, reduced mass, and.
Statistical problems in network data analysis: burst searches by narrowband detectors L.Baggio and G.A.Prodi ICRR TokyoUniv.Trento and INFN IGEC time coincidence.
New data analysis for AURIGA Lucio Baggio Italy, INFN and University of Trento AURIGA.
Paris, July 17, 2009 RECENT RESULTS OF THE IGEC2 COLLABORATION SEARCH FOR GRAVITATIONAL WAVE BURST Massimo Visco on behalf of the IGEC2 Collaboration.
Adapting matched filtering searches for compact binary inspirals in LSC detector data. Chad Hanna – For the LIGO Scientific Collaboration.
Silvia Poggi - GW burst detection strategy in non-homogeneus networks Detection strategies for bursts in networks of non-homogeneus gravitational waves.
Coincidences in gravitational wave experiments Pia Astone 4 th Amaldi conference Perth July 8-13, 2001.
TAMA binary inspiral event search Hideyuki Tagoshi (Osaka Univ., Japan) 3rd TAMA symposium, ICRR, 2/6/2003.
1SBPI 16/06/2009 Heterodyne detection with LISA for gravitational waves parameters estimation Nicolas Douillet.
LIGO-G Z Coherent Analysis of Signals from Misaligned Interferometers M. Rakhmanov, S. Klimenko Department of Physics, University of Florida,
A statistical test for point source searches - Aart Heijboer - AWG - Cern june 2002 A statistical test for point source searches Aart Heijboer contents:
LIGO-G Z A Coherent Network Burst Analysis Patrick Sutton on behalf of Shourov Chatterji, Albert Lazzarini, Antony Searle, Leo Stein, Massimo.
Solution of the Inverse Problem for Gravitational Wave Bursts Massimo Tinto JPL/CIT LIGO Seminar, October 12, 2004 Y. Gursel & M. Tinto, Phys. Rev. D,
Searching for Gravitational Waves with LIGO Andrés C. Rodríguez Louisiana State University on behalf of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration SACNAS
LIGO-G Z April 2006 APS meeting Igor Yakushin (LLO, Caltech) Search for Gravitational Wave Bursts in LIGO’s S5 run Igor Yakushin (LLO, Caltech)
A.Viceré, Università di Urbino HTASC 2003, Pisa June 13 th 1/20 Virgo Data Analysis Andrea Viceré Università di Urbino and INFN Firenze
S.Klimenko, July 14, 2007, Amaldi7,Sydney, G Z Detection and reconstruction of burst signals with networks of gravitational wave detectors S.Klimenko,
Amaldi-7 meeting, Sydney, Australia, July 8-14, 2007 LIGO-G Z All-Sky Search for Gravitational Wave Bursts during the fifth LSC Science Run Igor.
Status of coalescing binaries search activities in Virgo GWDAW 11 Status of coalescing binaries search activities in Virgo GWDAW Dec 2006 Leone.
G030XXX-00-Z Excess power trigger generator Patrick Brady and Saikat Ray-Majumder University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee LIGO Scientific Collaboration.
Status of VIRGO Lisa Barsotti - University and INFN Pisa – on behalf of the VIRGO collaboration ANNECY - December 15 th, 2004  Status of the Commissioning.
Searching for Gravitational Waves from Binary Inspirals with LIGO Duncan Brown University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration.
1 Status of Search for Compact Binary Coalescences During LIGO’s Fifth Science Run Drew Keppel 1 for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration 1 California Institute.
LISA Aperture Synthesis for Searching Binary Compact Objects Aaron Rogan Washington State University Collaborator: Sukanta Bose GWDAW.
LIGO-G Data Analysis Techniques for LIGO Laura Cadonati, M.I.T. Trento, March 1-2, 2007.
LIGO-G E Network Analysis For Coalescing Binary (or any analysis with Matched Filtering) Benoit MOURS, Caltech & LAPP-Annecy March 2001, LSC Meeting.
Joint LIGO-Virgo data analysis Inspiral and Burst Summary of the first project results Overview of the future activities M.-A. Bizouard (LAL-Orsay) on.
S.Klimenko, G Z, March 20, 2006, LSC meeting First results from the likelihood pipeline S.Klimenko (UF), I.Yakushin (LLO), A.Mercer (UF),G.Mitselmakher.
GWDAW10, UTB, Dec , Search for inspiraling neutron star binaries using TAMA300 data Hideyuki Tagoshi on behalf of the TAMA collaboration.
S. Frasca INFN – Virgo and “La Sapienza” Rome University Baton Rouge, March 2007.
LIGO-G All-Sky Burst Search in the First Year of the LSC S5 Run Laura Cadonati, UMass Amherst For the LIGO Scientific Collaboration GWDAW Meeting,
Stochastic Background Data Analysis Giancarlo Cella I.N.F.N. Pisa first ENTApP - GWA joint meeting Paris, January 23rd and 24th, 2006 Institute d'Astrophysique.
Comparison of filters for burst detection M.-A. Bizouard on behalf of the LAL-Orsay group GWDAW 7 th IIAS-Kyoto 2002/12/19.
G Z The LIGO gravitational wave detector consists of two observatories »LIGO Hanford Observatory – 2 interferometers (4 km long arms and 2 km.
GWDAW11 – Potsdam Results by the IGEC2 collaboration on 2005 data Gabriele Vedovato for the IGEC2 collaboration.
LIGO-G Z Searching for gravitational wave bursts with the new global detector network Shourov K. Chatterji INFN Sezioni di Roma / Caltech LIGO.
In conclusion the intensity level of the CCD is linear up to the saturation limit, but there is a spilling of charges well before the saturation if.
The first AURIGA-TAMA joint analysis proposal BAGGIO Lucio ICRR, University of Tokyo A Memorandum of Understanding between the AURIGA experiment and the.
LIGO-G Z The Q Pipeline search for gravitational-wave bursts with LIGO Shourov K. Chatterji for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration APS Meeting.
Search for compact binary systems in LIGO data Craig Robinson On behalf of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration Cardiff University, U.K. LIGO-G
Thomas Cokelaer for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration Cardiff University, U.K. APS April Meeting, Jacksonville, FL 16 April 2007, LIGO-G Z Search.
Data Analysis report November, 2009 Gianluca M Guidi
A 2 veto for Continuous Wave Searches
Igor Yakushin, LIGO Livingston Observatory
Advanced VIRGO Experiment
LIGO Scientific Collaboration meeting
An improved method for estimating the efficiency of GW detectors
Stochastic Background
M.-A. Bizouard, F. Cavalier
Targeted Searches using Q Pipeline
LISA Data Analysis & Sources
Excess power trigger generator
OK Alexander Dietz Louisiana State University
Coherent Coincident Analysis of LIGO Burst Candidates
A Waveform Consistency Test for Binary Inspirals using LIGO data
Presentation transcript:

1 Testing coherent code for coalescing binaries network analysis Simona Birindelli INFN Pisa, Università di Pisa Leone B. Bosi INFN Perugia, Università di Perugia Andrea Viceré INFN Firenze, Università di Urbino

2 Determination of the source position With a network of three detectors we can determine the source position (modulo a reflection with respect to the three interferometers plane), using the coincident and coherent analysis methods. We have tested a combination of the two methods, which starts from a coincidence and tries to improve the determination using the coherent analysis, first using a “classic” maximization and successively with a fit of the network statistic. We have considered the usual network composed by Virgo and the two 4 Km LIGOs.

3 Coherent analysis method The basic idea is to “construct” an ideal detector equivalent to the network, to which each real detector coherently contributes with its sensitivity, position, orientation.. The most useful network statistic (see Phys.Rev D 64, (2001) by Pai, Dhurandhar and Bose) is the Logarithm of the Likelyhood Ratio, and can be written as: where is a matrix with as many rows as the number of detectors in the network, depending on the interferometers locations, their relative sensitivities and source position is the usual Wiener correlator computed (for the two quadratures) by each experiment, and depends on stellar masses and location is the time delay of the I-th detector with respect to the network frame.

4 The work L.Bosi produced with Merlino coalescing binaries events using the LIGO-Virgo project 1b simulated data. The exact masses of the injections were used for the Wiener filter. The SNR threshold was set at SNR 4, thus resulting in a rate of several events per second. In order to make it possible to compute the logarithm of the likelyhood ratio for different directions in the sky(and therefore different shifts within the correlators) for each detector and for each events, the correlators were saved around the maxima.

5 First simple test: crude maximization of the LLR Choosing a pair of interferometers we have searched for double coincidences (events with both SNR > 6), then we have searched over the events of the third detector to find the one which maximizes the LLR (with masses and time delays compatible). More in details, for each double coincidence we have computed the LLR, and we have maximized it over the correlators (the two quadratures) of the third detector. So we have extrapolated the best guess for the signal arrival time at the third interferometer, and determined the source position with the same geometric method used for the coincident search. We have repeated the procedure with the other two possible combinations of interferometers (a couple, and the third), and chosen the reconstructions with maximum LLRs.

6 First test: accuracy of the reconstruction For each event we have computed the source position also with the triple coincidence method, using the time of the maximum of the correlator at each detector. The crude maximization of LLR did not seem to systematically improve the determination, probably because the maximization over one correlator only is not sufficient to optimize the position reconstruction

7 Second test: global maximization and parabolic fit to the LLR Perform a global maximization over all the correlators simultaneously: Starting from a triple coincidence, we have maximized the LLR around each maximum over the three correlators in order to refine the reconstruction. (Coherent maximization) Make a fit of the LLR behavior instead of simply take its maximum value: From its behavior near the maxima, we have supposed that the LLR could be fitted with a parabolic function of the three correlator indexes. (Coherent fit)

8 Comparison between the methods The reconstructed position is improved fitting the likelyhood respect to the coincidence one, and also respect to the LLR total maximization

9 The accuracy during a day is quite uniform for all the three methods M87 reconstructed position - real position Coincident dec mean = 3°45’ dec standard deviation = 8°59’ RA mean = -3°31’ RA std. dev = 14°49’ Coherent fit dec mean = 0°38’ dec standard deviation = 3°37’ RA mean = -0°02’ RA std. dev = 1°58’ Coherent max dec mean = 0°09’ dec standard deviation = 7°20’ RA mean = 1°40’ RA std. dev = 9°21’ NGC6744 reconstructed position - real position Coincident dec mean = 0°46’ dec standard deviation = 6°40’ RA mean = -7°43’ RA std. dev = 52°35’ Coherent fit dec mean = 0°04’ dec standard deviation = 2°45’ RA mean = 1°08’ RA std. dev = 4°20’ Coherent max dec mean = 0°48’ dec standard deviation = 8°55’ RA mean = 1°10’ RA std. dev = 14°34’

10 Conclusions and future work In this work we have done a comparison of coincident and coherent methods in the reconstruction of the source position, using a network of three interferometers. We have focused on signal emitted by binary newtron stars. The results obtained using LIGO-Virgo simulated data appear to be promising. The maximization of the network LLR followed by a fit of the LLR allowed to improve the source position The next step is to fully characterize the method, assessing its performance at different SNR levels, for a wider range of sky locations.