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What will it mean to be a gravitational wave astronomer?

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Presentation on theme: "What will it mean to be a gravitational wave astronomer?"— Presentation transcript:

1 What will it mean to be a gravitational wave astronomer?
Summary by: Ben Owen, scribe B. Sathyaprakash, moderator

2 Stan Whitcomb, instrumentalist
The story of infrared astronomy Community evolved from do-it-yourself to makers of data products for customers Some individuals became just astronomers, some moved on to other instruments Thinks GW will not be like IR: Fewer crossover sources Collaboration size & authorship intimidate Borderline detections need instrumentalists

3 Alberto Vecchio, theorist
Papers X, Y, and Z need Catalogs of individual events Catalogs of predicted waveforms (source parameters) Data analysis algorithms (statistics) Population evolution models & codes All sky online survey to get pointing info Communication infrastructure, institution MoU Are we ready for the unexpected? Is bidding for telescope time part of GW astronomy?

4 What is a GW astronomer? Some people are, but don’t call themselves such Is a GW physicist different from a GW astronomer? Testing no-hair theorem vs. BH demographics Will a heterogeneous community self-identify and use facilities in different ways? No clear consensus “Yes” from previous experience of astronomers “No” from GW; after all it’s the same data Self-identification vs. practical reality?

5 Data accessibility – THE issue
Proprietary Discovery Reward (esp. young) Complexity of data Marginality of data Embarrassing non-discoveries Public Taxpayer money Increased science output Enhances support & builds community Proprietary period?

6 Data products Which products for which customers? Which sources (affects proprietary period too)? Database of events for each source class “Raw” calibrated h(t) so outsiders can do their own analysis of archived data? Problem: instrumental knowledge gets stale Tied in to data access thread Broad consensus: accessibility must/will increase No consensus on timing, but clear trend: sooner

7 Bidding for “telescope time”
Consensus: Yes, this will be an issue For GW it means computing resources (how you “point” an ear not an eye) And frequency band: Broad or narrow? Where if narrow? Right now tuning the band means instrument is offline for 6 months Need to plan now for tunable mirrors, xylophones, or other solutions in 20 years

8 Expect the unexpected Consensus: YES!
Does too much planning mean we lose a source that wasn’t in the plan? LISA removal of white dwarf “noise” LIGO burst analyses assume duration & band Argument for keeping “raw” h(t) around “If I knew what I was going to get, it wouldn’t be research!”


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