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Narrowband searches for continuous and long-duration transient gravitational waves from known pulsars in the LIGO-Virgo third observing run

Authors :
National Science Foundation (US)
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US)
Science and Technology Facilities Council (UK)
Generalitat Valenciana
Generalitat de Catalunya
European Research Council
European Commission
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Govern de les Illes Balears
Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo (Chile)
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile)
Abbott, R.
Andrade, T.
Barneo, P.
Colleoni, Marta
Estellés, Héctor
García-Quirós, Cecilio
Husa, Sascha
Jaume, Rafel
Kuroyanagi, S.
Keitel, David
Mateu-Lucena, Maite
Modafferi, Luana M.
Moragues, J.
Planas, L.
Sintes, Alicia M.
Sanuy, Andreu
Tenorio, Rodrigo
Weltevrede, Patrick
National Science Foundation (US)
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US)
Science and Technology Facilities Council (UK)
Generalitat Valenciana
Generalitat de Catalunya
European Research Council
European Commission
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Govern de les Illes Balears
Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo (Chile)
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile)
Abbott, R.
Andrade, T.
Barneo, P.
Colleoni, Marta
Estellés, Héctor
García-Quirós, Cecilio
Husa, Sascha
Jaume, Rafel
Kuroyanagi, S.
Keitel, David
Mateu-Lucena, Maite
Modafferi, Luana M.
Moragues, J.
Planas, L.
Sintes, Alicia M.
Sanuy, Andreu
Tenorio, Rodrigo
Weltevrede, Patrick
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Isolated neutron stars that are asymmetric with respect to their spin axis are possible sources of detectable continuous gravitational waves. This paper presents a fully coherent search for such signals from eighteen pulsars in data from LIGO and Virgo's third observing run (O3). For known pulsars, efficient and sensitive matched-filter searches can be carried out if one assumes the gravitational radiation is phase-locked to the electromagnetic emission. In the search presented here, we relax this assumption and allow both the frequency and the time derivative of the frequency of the gravitational waves to vary in a small range around those inferred from electromagnetic observations. We find no evidence for continuous gravitational waves, and set upper limits on the strain amplitude for each target. These limits are more constraining for seven of the targets than the spin-down limit defined by ascribing all rotational energy loss to gravitational radiation. In an additional search, we look in O3 data for long-duration (hours–months) transient gravitational waves in the aftermath of pulsar glitches for six targets with a total of nine glitches. We report two marginal outliers from this search, but find no clear evidence for such emission either. The resulting duration-dependent strain upper limits do not surpass indirect energy constraints for any of these targets.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1373160224
Document Type :
Electronic Resource