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Search for Gravitational Waves Associated with Gamma-Ray Bursts during the First Advanced LIGO Observing Run and Implications for the Origin of GRB 150906B

Authors :
Aggarwal, Nancy
Barsotti, Lisa
Biscans, Sebastien
Brown, N. M.
Buikema, Aaron
Donovan, Frederick J
Eisenstein, Robert Alan
Essick, Reed Clasey
Evans, Matthew J
Fernandez Galiana, Alvaro-Miguel
Fritschel, Peter K
Gras, Slawomir
Isogai, Tomoki
Katsavounidis, Erotokritos
Kontos, Antonios
Lanza Jr, Robert K
Libson, Adam A.
Lynch, Ryan Christopher
MacInnis, Myron E
Martynov, Denis
Mason, Kenneth R
Matichard, Fabrice
Mavalvala, Nergis
Miller, John
Mittleman, Richard K
Ray Pitambar Mohapatra, Satyanarayan
Oelker, Eric Glenn
Shoemaker, David H
Tse, Maggie
Vitale, Salvatore
Weiss, Rainer
Yam, William
Yu, Hang
Yu, Haocun
Zucker, Michael E
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Laboratory for Nuclear Science
LIGO (Observatory : Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research
Aggarwal, Nancy
Barsotti, Lisa
Biscans, Sebastien
Brown, N. M.
Buikema, Aaron
Donovan, Frederick J
Eisenstein, Robert Alan
Essick, Reed Clasey
Evans, Matthew J
Fernandez Galiana, Alvaro-Miguel
Fritschel, Peter K
Gras, Slawomir
Isogai, Tomoki
Katsavounidis, Erotokritos
Kontos, Antonios
Lanza Jr, Robert K
Libson, Adam A.
Lynch, Ryan Christopher
MacInnis, Myron E
Martynov, Denis
Mason, Kenneth R
Matichard, Fabrice
Mavalvala, Nergis
Miller, John
Mittleman, Richard K
Ray Pitambar Mohapatra, Satyanarayan
Oelker, Eric Glenn
Shoemaker, David H
Tse, Maggie
Vitale, Salvatore
Weiss, Rainer
Yam, William
Yu, Hang
Yu, Haocun
Zucker, Michael E
Source :
IOP Publishing
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2017.

Abstract

We present the results of the search for gravitational waves (GWs) associated with γ-ray bursts detected during the first observing run of the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). We find no evidence of a GW signal for any of the 41 γ-ray bursts for which LIGO data are available with sufficient duration. For all γ-ray bursts, we place lower bounds on the distance to the source using the optimistic assumption that GWs with an energy of were emitted within the-Hz band, and we find a median 90% confidence limit of 71 Mpc at 150 Hz. For the subset of 19 short/hard γ-ray bursts, we place lower bounds on distance with a median 90% confidence limit of 90 Mpc for binary neutron star (BNS) coalescences, and 150 and 139 Mpc for neutron star-black hole coalescences with spins aligned to the orbital angular momentum and in a generic configuration, respectively. These are the highest distance limits ever achieved by GW searches. We also discuss in detail the results of the search for GWs associated with GRB 150906B, an event that was localized by the InterPlanetary Network near the local galaxy NGC 3313, which is at a luminosity distance of Mpc (z = 0.0124). Assuming the γ-ray emission is beamed with a jet half-opening angle, we exclude a BNS and a neutron star-black hole in NGC 3313 as the progenitor of this event with confidence > 99%. Further, we exclude such progenitors up to a distance of 102 Mpc and 170 Mpc, respectively.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IOP Publishing
Accession number :
edsair.od........88..7f5c0a556da70b466b0eba6d7ddbc82c