All-sky search for continuous gravitational waves from isolated neutron stars using Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo O3 data

Date

2022

Authors

Abbott, R.
Abe, H.
Acernese, F.
Ackley, K.
Adhikari, N.
Adhikari, R.X.
Adkins, V.K.
Adya, V.B.
Affeldt, C.
Agarwal, D.

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Journal article

Citation

Physical Review D (particles, fields, gravitation, and cosmology), 2022; 106(10):102008-1-102008-37

Statement of Responsibility

R. Abbott ... D. Beniwal ... G. N. Bolingbroke ... D. D. Brown ... H. Cao ... A. A. Ciobanu ... Z. J. Holmes ... K. Jenner ... J. Munch ... S. Muusse ... S.W. S. Ng ... D. J. Ottaway ... M. Pathak ... M. G. Schiworski ... P. J. Veitch ... et al. (LIGO Scientific Collaboration, Virgo Collaboration, and KAGRA Collaboration)

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Abstract

We present results of an all-sky search for continuous gravitational waves which can be produced by spinning neutron stars with an asymmetry around their rotation axis, using data from the third observing run of the Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo detectors. Four different analysis methods are used to search in a gravitational-wave frequency band from 10 to 2048 Hz and a first frequency derivative from −10⁻⁸ to 10⁻⁹ Hz/s. No statistically significant periodic gravitational-wave signal is observed by any of the four searches. As a result, upper limits on the gravitational-wave strain amplitude h₀ are calculated. The best upper limits are obtained in the frequency range of 100 to 200 Hz and they are ∼1.1 × 10⁻²⁵ at 95% confidence level. The minimum upper limit of 1.10 × 10⁻²⁵ is achieved at a frequency 111.5 Hz. We also place constraints on the rates and abundances of nearby planetary- and asteroid-mass primordial black holes that could give rise to continuous gravitational-wave signals.

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Published 28 November 2022

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© 2022 American Physical Society

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