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Featured researches published by A. L. Urban.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

The first two years of electromagnetic follow-up with advanced LIGO and Virgo

L. P. Singer; Lawrence Price; B. Farr; A. L. Urban; C. Pankow; Salvatore Vitale; J. Veitch; W. M. Farr; Chad Hanna; K. C. Cannon; Tom Downes; P. B. Graff; Carl-Johan Haster; Ilya Mandel; T. L. Sidery; Alberto Vecchio

We anticipate the first direct detections of gravitational waves (GWs) with Advanced LIGO and Virgo later this decade. Though this groundbreaking technical achievement will be its own reward, a still greater prize could be observations of compact binary mergers in both gravitational and electromagnetic channels simultaneously. During Advanced LIGO and Virgos first two years of operation, 2015 through 2016, we expect the global GW detector array to improve in sensitivity and livetime and expand from two to three detectors. We model the detection rate and the sky localization accuracy for binary neutron star (BNS) mergers across this transition. We have analyzed a large, astrophysically motivated source population using real-time detection and sky localization codes and higher-latency parameter estimation codes that have been expressly built for operation in the Advanced LIGO/Virgo era. We show that for most BNS events, the rapid sky localization, available about a minute after a detection, is as accurate as the full parameter estimation. We demonstrate that Advanced Virgo will play an important role in sky localization, even though it is anticipated to come online with only one-third as much sensitivity as the Advanced LIGO detectors. We find that the median 90% confidence region shrinks from ~500 deg^2 in 2015 to ~200 deg^2 in 2016. A few distinct scenarios for the first LIGO/Virgo detections emerge from our simulations.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

PARAMETER ESTIMATION FOR BINARY NEUTRON-STAR COALESCENCES WITH REALISTIC NOISE DURING THE ADVANCED LIGO ERA

C. P. L. Berry; Ilya Mandel; H. Middleton; L. P. Singer; A. L. Urban; Alberto Vecchio; Salvatore Vitale; K. C. Cannon; B. Farr; W. M. Farr; P. B. Graff; Chad Hanna; Carl-Johan Haster; S. R. P. Mohapatra; C. Pankow; Lawrence Price; T. L. Sidery; J. Veitch

Advanced ground-based gravitational-wave (GW) detectors begin operation imminently. Their intended goal is not only to make the first direct detection of GWs, but also to make inferences about the source systems. Binary neutron-star mergers are among the most promising sources. We investigate the performance of the parameter-estimation (PE) pipeline that will be used during the first observing run of the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (aLIGO) in 2015: we concentrate on the ability to reconstruct the source location on the sky, but also consider the ability to measure masses and the distance. Accurate, rapid sky localization is necessary to alert electromagnetic (EM) observatories so that they can perform follow-up searches for counterpart transient events. We consider PE accuracy in the presence of non-stationary, non-Gaussian noise. We find that the character of the noise makes negligible difference to the PE performance at a given signal-to-noise ratio. The source luminosity distance can only be poorly constrained, since the median 90% (50%) credible interval scaled with respect to the true distance is 0.85 (0.38). However, the chirp mass is well measured. Our chirp-mass estimates are subject to systematic error because we used gravitational-waveform templates without component spin to carry out inference on signals with moderate spins, but the total error is typically less than 10^(-3) M_☉. The median 90% (50%) credible region for sky localization is ~ 600 deg^2 (~150 deg^2), with 3% (30%) of detected events localized within 100 deg^2. Early aLIGO, with only two detectors, will have a sky-localization accuracy for binary neutron stars of hundreds of square degrees; this makes EM follow-up challenging, but not impossible.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Going the Distance: Mapping Host Galaxies of LIGO and Virgo Sources in Three Dimensions Using Local Cosmography and Targeted Follow-up

L. P. Singer; Hsin-Yu Chen; Daniel E. Holz; W. M. Farr; Lawrence Price; V. Raymond; S. Bradley Cenko; Neil Gehrels; John K. Cannizzo; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. Nissanke; M. W. Coughlin; B. Farr; A. L. Urban; Salvatore Vitale; J. Veitch; P. B. Graff; C. P. L. Berry; S. R. P. Mohapatra; Ilya Mandel

The Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) discovered gravitational waves (GWs) from a binary black hole merger in 2015 September and may soon observe signals from neutron star mergers. There is considerable interest in searching for their faint and rapidly fading electromagnetic (EM) counterparts, though GW position uncertainties are as coarse as hundreds of square degrees. Because LIGOs sensitivity to binary neutron stars is limited to the local universe, the area on the sky that must be searched could be reduced by weighting positions by mass, luminosity, or star formation in nearby galaxies. Since GW observations provide information about luminosity distance, combining the reconstructed volume with positions and redshifts of galaxies could reduce the area even more dramatically. A key missing ingredient has been a rapid GW parameter estimation algorithm that reconstructs the full distribution of sky location and distance. We demonstrate the first such algorithm, which takes under a minute, fast enough to enable immediate EM follow-up. By combining the three-dimensional posterior with a galaxy catalog, we can reduce the number of galaxies that could conceivably host the event by a factor of 1.4, the total exposure time for the Swift X-ray Telescope by a factor of 2, the total exposure time for a synoptic optical survey by a factor of 2, and the total exposure time for a narrow-field optical telescope by a factor of 3. This encourages us to suggest a new role for small field of view optical instruments in performing targeted searches of the most massive galaxies within the reconstructed volumes.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Parameter estimation on gravitational waves from neutron-star binaries with spinning components

B. Farr; C. P. L. Berry; W. M. Farr; Carl-Johan Haster; H. Middleton; K. C. Cannon; P. B. Graff; Chad Hanna; Ilya Mandel; C. Pankow; Lawrence Price; T. L. Sidery; L. P. Singer; A. L. Urban; Alberto Vecchio; J. Veitch; Salvatore Vitale

Inspiraling binary neutron stars are expected to be one of the most significant sources of gravitational-wave signals for the new generation of advanced ground-based detectors. We investigate how well we could hope to measure properties of these binaries using the Advanced LIGO detectors, which began operation in September 2015. We study an astrophysically motivated population of sources (binary components with masses


Physical Review D | 2017

Calibration uncertainty for Advanced LIGO’s first and second observing runs

C. Cahillane; Joe Betzwieser; D. A. Brown; E. Goetz; Evan D. Hall; K. Izumi; S. Kandhasamy; S. Karki; Jeff S. Kissel; G. Mendell; R. Savage; D. Tuyenbayev; A. L. Urban; Aaron Viets; M. Wade; Alan J. Weinstein

1.2~\mathrm{M}_\odot


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2016

Supplement: “Going the Distance: Mapping Host Galaxies of LIGO and Virgo Sources in Three Dimensions Using Local Cosmography and Targeted Follow-up” (2016, ApJL, 829, L15)

L. P. Singer; Hsin-Yu Chen; Daniel E. Holz; W. M. Farr; Lawrence Price; V. Raymond; S. Bradley Cenko; Neil Gehrels; John K. Cannizzo; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. Nissanke; M. W. Coughlin; B. Farr; A. L. Urban; Salvatore Vitale; J. Veitch; P. B. Graff; C. P. L. Berry; S. R. P. Mohapatra; Ilya Mandel

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

IPTF14yb: The first discovery of a gamma-ray burst afterglow independent of a high-energy trigger

S. Bradley Cenko; A. L. Urban; Daniel A. Perley; Assaf Horesh; A. Corsi; Derek B. Fox; Yi Cao; Mansi M. Kasliwal; Amy Lien; I. Arcavi; Joshua S. Bloom; N. Butler; Antonino Cucchiara; Jose Antonio de Diego; Alexei V. Filippenko; Avishay Gal-Yam; Neil Gehrels; L. Georgiev; J. Jesús González; John F. Graham; J. Greiner; D. Alexander Kann; Christopher R. Klein; F. Knust; S. R. Kulkarni; Alexander S. Kutyrev; Russ R. Laher; William H. Lee; Peter Edward Nugent; J. Xavier Prochaska

1.6~\mathrm{M}_\odot


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

iPTF Archival Search for Fast Optical Transients

A. Y. Q. Ho; S. R. Kulkarni; Peter E. Nugent; Weijie Zhao; Florin Rusu; S. Bradley Cenko; V. Ravi; Mansi M. Kasliwal; Daniel A. Perley; Scott M. Adams; Eric C. Bellm; P. R. Brady; C. Fremling; Avishay Gal-Yam; D. A. Kann; David L. Kaplan; Russ R. Laher; Frank J. Masci; Eran O. Ofek; Jesper Sollerman; A. L. Urban

and spins of less than


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2017

Making h(t) for Advanced LIGO

Aaron Viets; M. Wade; A. L. Urban; S. Kandhasamy; Joe Betzwieser; D. A. Brown; Jordi Burguet-Castell; C. Cahillane; E. Goetz; K. Izumi; S. Karki; Jeff S. Kissel; G. Mendell; R. L. Savage; X. Siemens; D. Tuyenbayev; Alan J. Weinstein

0.05


Archive | 2015

PARAMETER ESTIMATION FOR BINARY NEUTRON-STAR COALESCENCES WITH REALISTIC NOISE DURING THE

C. P. L. Berry; Ilya Mandel; H. Middleton; L. P. Singer; A. L. Urban; Alberto Vecchio; Salvatore Vitale; K. C. Cannon; B. Farr; W. M. Farr; P. B. Graff; Chad Hanna; S. R. P. Mohapatra; C. Pankow; Lawrence Price; T. L. Sidery; J. Veitch

) using the full LIGO analysis pipeline. While this simulated population covers the observed range of potential binary neutron-star sources, we do not exclude the possibility of sources with parameters outside these ranges; given the existing uncertainty in distributions of mass and spin, it is critical that analyses account for the full range of possible mass and spin configurations. We find that conservative prior assumptions on neutron-star mass and spin lead to average fractional uncertainties in component masses of

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B. Farr

University of Chicago

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L. P. Singer

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Lawrence Price

California Institute of Technology

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Salvatore Vitale

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ilya Mandel

University of Birmingham

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J. Veitch

University of Birmingham

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W. M. Farr

University of Birmingham

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C. P. L. Berry

University of Birmingham

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C. Pankow

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Mansi M. Kasliwal

California Institute of Technology

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