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Bounding the strength of gravitational radiation from Sco-X1

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Presentation on theme: "Bounding the strength of gravitational radiation from Sco-X1"— Presentation transcript:

1 Bounding the strength of gravitational radiation from Sco-X1
C Messenger on behalf of the LSC pulsar group GWDAW 2004 Annecy, 15th – 18th December 2004 G Z

2 Scope of S2 analysis AIM : Set frequentist upper-limit on GWs on a wide parameter space using coherent frequency domain approach Sco-X1 is an LMXB -> GW emission mechanism supported via accretion [R.V.Wagoner, ApJ. 278,345 (1984)] Using F-statistic as detection statistic [Jaranowski,Krolak,Schutz, PRD,58,063001,(1998)] GWs at 2 frot (mass quadrupole [L.Bildsten, ApJ.Lett,501,L89 (1998)], not yet r-modes [Andersson et al, ,ApJ 516,307 (99)]) 2 frequency windows: 464 – 484 Hz (strong spectral features) and 604 – 624 Hz (reasonably clean) [Van der Klis, Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys, :717-60] Also search orbital parameter space of Sco-X1 Tobs = 6 hrs (set by computational resources) Analyse L1 and H1 in coincidence H1 L1 (whole S2) L1 H2 SCO X-1 6 hours, 1 filter GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

3 Analysis pipeline H1 F-Statistic L1 F-Statistic above threshold
Selection of 6 Hour dataset S2 H1 data S2 L1 data S2 L1 data subset S2 H1 data subset Generate Orbital template Bank For H1 H1 6 hour Template bank Generate Orbital template Bank For L1 L1 6 hour Template bank Generate PDF’s Via MC injection H1 F-Statistic above threshold L1 F-Statistic above threshold Compute F statistic over bank of filters and frequency range Store results above “threshold” Compute F statistic over bank of filters and frequency range Store results above “threshold” Find Coincidence events Calculate Upper Limits per band Find loudest event per band Coincident Results Follow up candidates GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

4 Selecting the optimal 6hr
We construct the following measure of detector sensitivity to a particular sky position GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

5 Sco X-1 parameter space The orbital ephemeris is taken from the latest (and first) direct observations of the lower mass object within Sco X-1 [Steeghs and Cesares, ApJ,568: ,2002] The orbit has eccentricity< ] Search for circular orbit (e=0) The period (P) is known very well and is NOT be a search parameter The Search parameters are : The projected orbital semi-major axis is (4.33+/-0.52) X 108 m The time of periapse passage (SSB frame) is /-299 sec The GW frequency is not well known and the current model predicts two possible bands, (464<f0<484) and (604<f0<624) Hz. [Van der Klis, Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys, :717-60] GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

6 Computational Costs T3 T T5 T2 2 weeks 6 hours
The scaling of computational time with observation time : T<P P<T<106 # Orbital Templates T3 constant # Frequency Templates T CPU time per template Computational time T5 T2 Using Tsunami (200 node Beowulf cluster) For 1s errors In parameters 2 weeks 6 hours This scaling limits this coherent search to an observation time of ~6 hours Additional parameter space dimensions become important for T>106 (inc spin up/down, period error, eccentricity) GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

7 Orbital templates Templates are laid in an approximately “flat” 2D space by choosing a sensible parameterisation. The template bank covers the uncertainty in the value of the projected semi-major axis and the time of periapse passage. The template placement is governed by the parameter space metric [Brady et al, PRD 57,2101 (1998), Dhurandhar and Vecchio, PRD, 63, (1998)] GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

8 The frequency resolution
Using the projected metric to lay orbital templates takes advantage of frequency – orbital parameter correlations. A mismatch in orbital parameters can be compensated for by a mismatch in frequency. We find that a frequency resolution of 1/(5Tobs) approximates a continuous frequency spectrum. A consequence of this approach is that the detection template and signal can differ in frequency by up to +/15 bins GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

9 Coincidence events The orbital template bank guarantees a >90% match with the closest filter. If a signal triggers a template we can identify a region around that template within which the true signal lies. >90% in Detector 1 Detector 2 Now find the possible closest templates in the second detector. The coincidence detection is based on geometric arguments only. Typically ~8 possible orbital and ~30 possible frequency coincidence locations ~200 possible coincident locations per event. GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

10 The search sensitivity
S1 paper ~ 20 The “11.4” factor is based on a false alarm rate of 1% and a false dismissal rate of 10% for a single filter search We use ~108 per 1 Hz band This significantly increases the chances of “seeing” something large just from the noise. Therefore we require stronger signals to obtain the same false dismissal and false alarm rates. GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z

11 Status and future work Currently Targets
We have analysed 1/5th of the parameter space Completing LSC code review (Organising and checking the growing number of codes + documentation) Ready to run the pipeline on the full parameter space and set frequentist upper limits via Monte-Carlo injections. Targets Implement suitable veto strategies (Fstat shape test, Fstat time domain test, …) Follow up loudest candidate(s) with an aim to veto them out (observe for longer ?, observe another data stretch ?, …) Start applying our understanding to the incoherent stacking approach (see poster by Virginia Re) Apply the coherent approach to other LMXB parameter space searches. GWDAW, Annecy 15th – 18th December, G Z


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