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Featured researches published by B. Machenschalk.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2006

Status of the GEO600 detector

H. Lück; M. Hewitson; P. Ajith; B. Allen; P. Aufmuth; C. Aulbert; S. Babak; R. Balasubramanian; B. Barr; Steven J. Berukoff; Alexander Bunkowski; G. Cagnoli; C. A. Cantley; M. M. Casey; S. Chelkowski; Y. Chen; D. Churches; T. Cokelaer; C. N. Colacino; D. R. M. Crooks; Curt Cutler; Karsten Danzmann; R. J. Dupuis; E. J. Elliffe; Carsten Fallnich; A. Franzen; A. Freise; I. Gholami; S. Goßler; A. Grant

Of all the large interferometric gravitational-wave detectors, the German/British project GEO600 is the only one which uses dual recycling. During the four weeks of the international S4 data-taking run it reached an instrumental duty cycle of 97% with a peak sensitivity of 7 × 10−22 Hz−1/2 at 1 kHz. This paper describes the status during S4 and improvements thereafter.


Science | 2010

Pulsar discovery by global volunteer computing

B. Knispel; B. Allen; J. M. Cordes; J. S. Deneva; David P. Anderson; C. Aulbert; N. D. R. Bhat; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; D. J. Champion; S. Chatterjee; F. Crawford; Paul Demorest; H. Fehrmann; P. C. C. Freire; M. E. Gonzalez; D. Hammer; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; L. Kasian; Victoria M. Kaspi; M. Kramer; P. Lazarus; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; A. G. Lyne; B. Machenschalk; M. A. McLaughlin

Einstein@Home, a distributed computing project, discovered a rare, isolated pulsar with a low magnetic field. Einstein@Home aggregates the computer power of hundreds of thousands of volunteers from 192 countries to mine large data sets. It has now found a 40.8-hertz isolated pulsar in radio survey data from the Arecibo Observatory taken in February 2007. Additional timing observations indicate that this pulsar is likely a disrupted recycled pulsar. PSR J2007+2722’s pulse profile is remarkably wide with emission over almost the entire spin period; the pulsar likely has closely aligned magnetic and spin axes. The massive computing power provided by volunteers should enable many more such discoveries.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2008

Searching for gravitational waves from Cassiopeia A with LIGO

K. Wette; B. J. Owen; B. Allen; M. Ashley; J. Betzwieser; N. Christensen; T. D. Creighton; V. Dergachev; I. Gholami; E. Goetz; R. Gustafson; D. Hammer; D. I. Jones; Badri Krishnan; M. Landry; B. Machenschalk; D. E. McClelland; G. Mendell; C. Messenger; M. A. Papa; P. Patel; M. Pitkin; H. J. Pletsch; R. Prix; K. Riles; L. Sancho De La Jordana; S. M. Scott; A. M. Sintes; M. Trias; James Whelan

We describe a search underway for periodic gravitational waves from the central compact object in the supernova remnant Cassiopeia A. The object is the youngest likely neutron star in the Galaxy. Its position is well known, but the object does not pulse in any electromagnetic radiation band and thus presents a challenge in searching the parameter space of frequency and frequency derivatives. We estimate that a fully coherent search can, with a reasonable amount of time on a computing cluster, achieve a sensitivity at which it is theoretically possible (though not likely) to observe a signal even with the initial LIGO noise spectrum. Cassiopeia A is only the second object after the Crab pulsar for which this is true. The search method described here can also obtain interesting results for similar objects with current LIGO sensitivity.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

Arecibo PALFA survey and Einstein@Home: Binary pulsar discovery by volunteer computing

B. Knispel; P. Lazarus; B. Allen; David P. Anderson; C. Aulbert; N. D. R. Bhat; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; G. Desvignes; H. Fehrmann; P. C. C. Freire; D. Hammer; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; V. M. Kaspi; M. Kramer; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; A. G. Lyne; B. Machenschalk; M. A. McLaughlin; C. Messenger; David J. Nice; M. A. Papa

We report the discovery of the 20.7 ms binary pulsar J1952+2630, made using the distributed computing project Einstein@Home in Pulsar ALFA survey observations with the Arecibo telescope. Follow-up observations with the Arecibo telescope confirm the binary nature of the system. We obtain a circular orbital solution with an orbital


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Einstein@Home Discovery of Four Young Gamma-Ray Pulsars in Fermi LAT Data

H. J. Pletsch; L. Guillemot; B. Allen; David P. Anderson; C. Aulbert; O. Bock; D. J. Champion; H. B. Eggenstein; H. Fehrmann; D. Hammer; R. Karuppusamy; M. J. Keith; M. Kramer; B. Machenschalk; C. Ng; M. A. Papa; Paul S. Ray; X. Siemens

We report the discovery of four gamma-ray pulsars, detected in computing-intensive blind searches of data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT). The pulsars were found using a novel search approach, combining volunteer distributed computing via Einstein@Home and methods originally developed in gravitational-wave astronomy. The pulsars PSRs J0554+3107, J1422–6138, J1522–5735, and J1932+1916 are young and energetic, with characteristic ages between 35 and 56 kyr and spin-down powers in the range 6 × 1034—1036 erg s–1. They are located in the Galactic plane and have rotation rates of less than 10 Hz, among which the 2.1 Hz spin frequency of PSR J0554+3107 is the slowest of any known gamma-ray pulsar. For two of the new pulsars, we find supernova remnants coincident on the sky and discuss the plausibility of such associations. Deep radio follow-up observations found no pulsations, suggesting that all four pulsars are radio-quiet as viewed from Earth. These discoveries, the first gamma-ray pulsars found by volunteer computing, motivate continued blind pulsar searches of the many other unidentified LAT gamma-ray sources.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

Einstein@Home Discovery of a PALFA Millisecond Pulsar in an Eccentric Binary Orbit

Benjamin Knispel; A. G. Lyne; B. W. Stappers; P. C. C. Freire; P. Lazarus; B. Allen; C. Aulbert; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; F. Cardoso; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; H. B. Eggenstein; H. Fehrmann; R. D. Ferdman; J. W. T. Hessels; Fredrick A. Jenet; C. Karako-Argaman; V. M. Kaspi; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; Ryan S. Lynch; B. Machenschalk; E. Madsen; M. A. McLaughlin; C. Patel

We report the discovery of the millisecond pulsar (MSP) PSR J1950+2414 (P = 4.3 ms) in a binary system with an eccentric (e = 0.08) 22 day orbit in Pulsar Arecibo L-band Feed Array survey observations with the Arecibo telescope. Its companion star has a median mass of 0.3 M⊙ and is most likely a white dwarf (WD). Fully recycled MSPs like this one are thought to be old neutron stars spun-up by mass transfer from a companion star. This process should circularize the orbit, as is observed for the vast majority of binary MSPs, which predominantly have orbital eccentricities e < 0.001. However, four recently discovered binary MSPs have orbits with 0. 027 < e < 0.44; PSR J1950+2414 is the fifth such system to be discovered. The upper limits for its intrinsic spin period derivative and inferred surface magnetic field strength are comparable to those of the general MSP population. The large eccentricities are incompatible with the predictions of the standard recycling scenario: something unusual happened during their evolution. Proposed scenarios are (a) initial evolution of the pulsar in a triple system which became dynamically unstable, (b) origin in an exchange encounter in an environment with high stellar density, (c) rotationally delayed accretion-induced collapse of a super-Chandrasekhar WD, and (d) dynamical interaction of the binary with a circumbinary disk. We compare the properties of all five known eccentric MSPs with the predictions of these formation channels. Future measurements of the masses and proper motion might allow us to firmly exclude some of the proposed formation scenarios.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

THE EINSTEIN@HOME GAMMA-RAY PULSAR SURVEY. I. SEARCH METHODS, SENSITIVITY, and DISCOVERY of NEW YOUNG GAMMA-RAY PULSARS

Colin J. Clark; J. Wu; H. J. Pletsch; L. Guillemot; B. Allen; C. Aulbert; Christian Beer; O. Bock; A. Cuéllar; H. B. Eggenstein; H. Fehrmann; M. Kramer; B. Machenschalk; L. Nieder

We report on the results of a recent blind search survey for gamma-ray pulsars in Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) data being carried out on the distributed volunteer computing system, Ein-stein@Home. The survey has searched for pulsations in 118 unidentified pulsar-like sources, requiring about 10, 000 years of CPU core time. In total, this survey has resulted in the discovery of 17 new gamma-ray pulsars, of which 13 are newly reported in this work, and an accompanying paper. These pulsars are all young, isolated pulsars with characteristic ages between 12 kyr and 2 Myr, and spin-down powers between 10 34 and 4 × 10 36 erg s −1. Two of these are the slowest spinning gamma-ray pulsars yet known. One pulsar experienced a very large glitch ∆f /f ≈ 3.5 × 10 −6 during the Fermi mission. In this, the first of two associated papers, we describe the search scheme used in this survey, and estimate the sensitivity of our search to pulsations in unidentified Fermi-LAT sources. One such estimate results in an upper limit of 57% for the fraction of pulsed emission from the gamma-ray source associated with the Cas A supernova remnant, constraining the pulsed gamma-ray photon flux that can be produced by the neutron star at its center. We also present the results of precise timing analyses for each of the newly detected pulsars.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Einstein@Home discovery of a Double Neutron Star Binary in the PALFA Survey

P. Lazarus; P. C. C. Freire; B. Allen; C. Aulbert; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; F. Cardoso; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; H. B. Eggenstein; H. Fehrmann; R. D. Ferdman; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; C. Karako-Argaman; V. M. Kaspi; Benjamin Knispel; R. Lynch; J. van Leeuwen; B. Machenschalk; E. Madsen; M. A. McLaughlin; C. Patel; S. M. Ransom; P. Scholz; A. Seymour

We report here the Einstein@Home discovery of PSR J1913+1102, a 27.3 ms pulsar found in data from the ongoing Arecibo PALFA pulsar survey. The pulsar is in a 4.95 hr double neutron star (DNS) system with an eccentricity of 0.089. From radio timing with the Arecibo 305 m telescope, we measure the rate of advance of periastron to be


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

The Braking Index of a Radio-quiet Gamma-ray Pulsar

Colin J. Clark; H. J. Pletsch; J. Wu; L. Guillemot; F. Camilo; T. J. Johnson; M. Kerr; B. Allen; C. Aulbert; Christian Beer; O. Bock; A. Cuéllar; H. B. Eggenstein; H. Fehrmann; M. Kramer; B. Machenschalk; L. Nieder

\dot{\omega }=5.632(18)


Gravitational wave and particle astrophysics detectors | 2004

The Status of GEO600

K. A. Strain; B. Allen; P. Aufmuth; C. Aulbert; S. Babak; R. Balasubramanian; B. Barr; Steven J. Berukoff; Alexander Bunkowski; G. Cagnoli; C. A. Cantley; M. M. Casey; S. Chelkowski; D. Churches; T. Cokelaer; C. N. Colacino; D. R. M. Crooks; Curt Cutler; Karsten Danzmann; R. Davies; R. J. Dupuis; E. J. Elliffe; Carsten Fallnich; A. Franzen; A. Freise; S. Gossler; A. Grant; H. Grote; S. Grunewald; J. Harms

° yr−1. Assuming general relativity accurately models the orbital motion, this corresponds to a total system mass of M tot = 2.875(14)

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B. Allen

Albert Einstein Institution

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