File Download

  • Find it @ UNIST can give you direct access to the published full text of this article. (UNISTARs only)
Related Researcher

곽규진

Kwak, Kyujin
Computational Astrophysics Lab.
Read More

Views & Downloads

Detailed Information

Cited time in webofscience Cited time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

All-sky search for short gravitational-wave bursts in the first part of the fourth LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA observing run

Author(s)
Abac, AdrianJung, KihyunKwak, KyujinRuhama, NLIGO ScientificVirgoKAGRA
Issued Date
2025-11
DOI
10.1103/wjdz-jdby
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/88752
Fulltext
https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/wjdz-jdby#acknowledgements
Citation
PHYSICAL REVIEW D, v.112, pp.102005
Abstract
We present a search for short-duration gravitational-wave transients in data from the first eight months of
Advanced LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA’s fourth observing run, denoted O4a. We use four analyses which are
sensitive to a wide range of potential signals lasting up to a few seconds in the 16–4096 Hz band. Excluding
binary black hole merger candidates that were already identified by low-latency analyses, we find no
statistically significant evidence for other gravitational-wave transients. We measure the sensitivity of the
search for representative signals, including sine-Gaussians, Gaussian pulses, and white-noise bursts with
different frequencies and durations, adopting a false alarm rate of 1 per 100 years as detection threshold.
Depending on signal type, we find improvements over previous searches by factors of 2 to 10 in terms of
sensitivity to strain amplitude and of 90% confidence upper limit on the rate density of sources. We also
evaluate a variety of core-collapse supernova models and find that, for some models, the search could have
detected gravitational waves from stellar core-collapse throughout the Milky Way. Finally, we consider
neutron star f-modes associated with pulsar glitches and find that, assuming a source similar to the Vela
Pulsar, the search could have detected a gravitational-wave signal from a glitch with fractional frequency
change as small as ∼2 to 6 × 10−5 depending on the neutron star mass.
Publisher
AMER PHYSICAL SOC
ISSN
2470-0010

qrcode

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.