A morphology-independent search for gravitational wave echoes in data from the first and second observing runs of Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo

Open Access
Authors
  • K.W. Tsang
  • A. Ghosh
  • A. Samajdar
  • K. Chatziioannou
Publication date 15-03-2020
Journal Physical Review D. Particles, Fields, Gravitation, and Cosmology
Article number 064012
Volume | Issue number 101 | 6
Number of pages 7
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP)
Abstract

Gravitational wave echoes have been proposed as a smoking-gun signature of exotic compact objects with near-horizon structure. Recently there have been observational claims that echoes are indeed present in stretches of data from Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo immediately following gravitational wave signals from presumed binary black hole mergers, as well as a binary neutron star merger. In this paper we deploy a morphology-independent search algorithm for echoes introduced by Tsang et al. [Phys. Rev. D 98, 024023 (2018)], which (a) is able to accurately reconstruct a possible echoes signal with minimal assumptions about their morphology, and (b) computes Bayesian evidences for the hypotheses that the data contain a signal, an instrumental glitch, or just stationary, Gaussian noise. Here we apply this analysis method to all the significant events in the first Gravitational Wave Transient Catalog (GWTC-1), which comprises the signals from binary black hole and binary neutron star coalescences found during the first and second observing runs of Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo. In all cases, the ratios of evidences for signal versus noise and signal versus glitch do not rise above their respective “background distributions” obtained from detector noise, the smallest p-value being 3% (for event GW170823). Hence we find no statistically significant evidence for echoes in GWTC-1.
Document type Article
Note © 2020 American Physical Society
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.101.064012
Downloads
PhysRevD.101.064012 (Final published version)
Permalink to this page
Back