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Dive into the research topics where C. Messenger is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Messenger.


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.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

The status of GEO 600

K. A. Strain; B. Allen; P. Aufmuth; Carsten 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; Carlo Nicola Colacino; D. R. M. Crooks; Curt Cutler; Karsten Danzmann; R. Davies; R. J. Dupuis; E. J. Elliffe; Carsten Fallnich; A. Franzen; Andreas Freise; S. Goßler; A. Grant; H. Grote; S. Grunewald; J. Harms

The GEO 600 laser interferometer with 600m armlength is part of a worldwide network of gravitational wave detectors. GEO 600 is unique in having advanced multiple pendulum suspensions with a monolithic last stage and in employing a signal recycled optical design. This paper describes the recent commissioning of the interferometer and its operation in signal recycled mode.


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.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

The long-term evolution of the accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar Swift J1756.9−2508

A. Patruno; D. Altamirano; C. Messenger

We present a timing analysis of the 2009 outburst of the accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar Swift J1756.9-2508, and a re-analysis of the 2007 outburst. The source shows a short recurrence time of only similar to 2 yr between outbursts. Thanks to the approximately 2 yr long baseline of data, we can constrain the magnetic field of the neutron star to be 0.4 x 10(8) less than or similar to B less than or similar to 9 x 10(8) G, which is within the range of typical accreting millisecond pulsars. The 2009 timing analysis allows us to put constraints on the accretion torque: the spin frequency derivative within the outburst has an upper limit of |(v) over dot| less than or similar to 3 x 10(-13) Hz s(-1) at the 95 per cent confidence level. A study of pulse profiles and their evolution during the outburst is analysed, suggesting a systematic change of shape that depends on the outburst phase. We report also the first evidence that the pulsed fractions increase with energy even if the source is in the hard state.


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.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Measuring a cosmological distance-redshift relationship using only gravitational wave observations of binary neutron star coalescences.

C. Messenger; J. Read

Detection of gravitational waves from the inspiral phase of binary neutron star coalescence will allow us to measure the effects of the tidal coupling in such systems. Tidal effects provide additional contributions to the phase evolution of the gravitational wave signal that break a degeneracy between the systems mass parameters and redshift and thereby allow the simultaneous measurement of both the effective distance and the redshift for individual sources. Using the population of O(10(3)-10(7)) detectable binary neutron star systems predicted for 3rd generation gravitational wave detectors, the luminosity distance-redshift relation can be probed independently of the cosmological distance ladder and independently of electromagnetic observations. We conclude that for a range of representative neutron star equations of state the redshift of such systems can be determined to an accuracy of 8%-40% for z<1 and 9%-65% for 1


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The radiative efficiency of a radiatively inefficient accretion flow

C. R. D'Angelo; Joel K. Fridriksson; C. Messenger; Alessandro Patruno

A recent joint XMM–Newton/Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) observation of the accreting neutron star Cen X-4 (LX ∼ 10^(33) erg s^(−1)) revealed a hard power-law component (Γ ∼ 1–1.5) with a relatively low cut-off energy (∼10 keV), suggesting bremsstrahlung emission. The physical requirements for bremsstrahlung combined with other observed properties of Cen X-4 suggest the emission comes from a boundary layer rather than the accretion flow. The accretion flow itself is thus undetected (with an upper limit of L_(flow) ≲ 0.3LX). A deep search for coherent pulsations (which would indicate a strong magnetic field) places a 6 per cent upper limit on the fractional amplitude of pulsations, suggesting the flow is not magnetically regulated. Considering the expected energy balance between the accretion flow and the boundary layer for different values of the neutron star parameters (size, magnetic field, and spin) we use the upper limit on L_(flow) to set an upper limit of e ≲ 0.3 for the intrinsic radiative efficiency of the accretion flow for the most likely model of a fast-spinning, non-magnetic neutron star. The non-detection of the accretion flow provides the first direct evidence that this flow is indeed ‘radiatively inefficient’, i.e. most of the gravitational potential energy lost by the flow before it hits the star is not emitted as radiation.


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


Physical Review D | 2015

Gravitational waves from Scorpius X-1: A comparison of search methods and prospects for detection with advanced detectors

C. Messenger; H. J. Bulten; S. G. Crowder; V. Dergachev; Duncan K. Galloway; E. Goetz; R. J. G. Jonker; P. D. Lasky; G. D. Meadors; A. Melatos; S. S. Premachandra; K. Riles; L. Sammut; E. Thrane; James Whelan; Y. Zhang

The low-mass X-ray binary Scorpius X-1 (Sco X-1) is potentially the most luminous source of continuous gravitational-wave radiation for interferometers such as LIGO and Virgo. For low-mass X-ray binaries this radiation would be sustained by active accretion of matter from its binary companion. With the Advanced Detector Era fast approaching, work is underway to develop an array of robust tools for maximizing the science and detection potential of Sco X-1. We describe the plans and progress of a project designed to compare the numerous independent search algorithms currently available. We employ a mock-data challenge in which the search pipelines are tested for their relative proficiencies in parameter estimation, computational efficiency, robustness, and most importantly, search sensitivity. The mock-data challenge data contains an ensemble of 50 Scorpius X-1 (Sco X-1) type signals, simulated within a frequency band of 50–1500 Hz. Simulated detector noise was generated assuming the expected best strain sensitivity of Advanced LIGO [1] and Advanced VIRGO [2] (4×10^(−24)  Hz^(−1/2)). A distribution of signal amplitudes was then chosen so as to allow a useful comparison of search methodologies. A factor of 2 in strain separates the quietest detected signal, at 6.8×10^(−26) strain, from the torque-balance limit at a spin frequency of 300 Hz, although this limit could range from 1.2×10^(−25) (25 Hz) to 2.2×10^(−26) (750 Hz) depending on the unknown frequency of Sco X-1. With future improvements to the search algorithms and using advanced detector data, our expectations for probing below the theoretical torque-balance strain limit are optimistic.


Physical Review D | 2011

Search method for long-duration gravitational-wave transients from neutron stars

R. Prix; S. Giampanis; C. Messenger

We introduce a search method for a new class of gravitational-wave signals, namely, long-duration Oðhours-weeksÞ transients from spinning neutron stars. We discuss the astrophysical motivation from glitch relaxation models and we derive a rough estimate for the maximal expected signal strength based on the superfluid excess rotational energy. The transient signal model considered here extends the traditional class of infinite-duration continuous-wave signals by a finite start-time and duration. We derive a multidetector Bayes factor for these signals in Gaussian noise using F-statistic amplitude priors, which simplifies the detection statistic and allows for an efficient implementation. We consider both a fully coherent statistic, which is computationally limited to directed searches for known pulsars, and a cheaper semicoherent variant, suitable for wide parameter-space searches for transients from unknown neutron stars. We have tested our method by Monte-Carlo simulation, and we find that it outperforms orthodox maximum-likelihood approaches both in sensitivity and in parameter-estimation quality.

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M. Hendry

University of Glasgow

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B. Barr

University of Glasgow

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M. Pitkin

University of Glasgow

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