Guenakh Mitselmakher
University of Florida
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Featured researches published by Guenakh Mitselmakher.
Reports on Progress in Physics | 2016
Sergey Alekhin; Wolfgang Altmannshofer; Takehiko Asaka; Brian Batell; Fedor Bezrukov; K. Bondarenko; Alexey Boyarsky; Ki-Young Choi; Cristobal Corral; Nathaniel Craig; David Curtin; Sacha Davidson; André de Gouvêa; Stefano Dell'Oro; Patrick deNiverville; P. S. Bhupal Dev; Herbi K. Dreiner; Marco Drewes; Shintaro Eijima; Rouven Essig; Anthony Fradette; Bjorn Garbrecht; Belen Gavela; Gian Francesco Giudice; Mark D. Goodsell; Dmitry Gorbunov; Stefania Gori; Christophe Grojean; Alberto Guffanti; Thomas Hambye
This paper describes the physics case for a new fixed target facility at CERN SPS. The SHiP (search for hidden particles) experiment is intended to hunt for new physics in the largely unexplored domain of very weakly interacting particles with masses below the Fermi scale, inaccessible to the LHC experiments, and to study tau neutrino physics. The same proton beam setup can be used later to look for decays of tau-leptons with lepton flavour number non-conservation, [Formula: see text] and to search for weakly-interacting sub-GeV dark matter candidates. We discuss the evidence for physics beyond the standard model and describe interactions between new particles and four different portals-scalars, vectors, fermions or axion-like particles. We discuss motivations for different models, manifesting themselves via these interactions, and how they can be probed with the SHiP experiment and present several case studies. The prospects to search for relatively light SUSY and composite particles at SHiP are also discussed. We demonstrate that the SHiP experiment has a unique potential to discover new physics and can directly probe a number of solutions of beyond the standard model puzzles, such as neutrino masses, baryon asymmetry of the Universe, dark matter, and inflation.
Physical Review D | 2005
S. Klimenko; Soumya Mohanty; M. Rakhmanov; Guenakh Mitselmakher
We propose a coherent method for detection and reconstruction of gravitational wave signals with a network of interferometric detectors. The method is derived by using the likelihood ratio functional for unknown signal waveforms. In the likelihood analysis, the global maximum of the likelihood ratio over the space of waveforms is used as the detection statistic. We identify a problem with this approach. In the case of an aligned pair of detectors, the detection statistic depends on the cross correlation between the detectors as expected, but this dependence disappears even for infinitesimally small misalignments. We solve the problem by applying constraints on the likelihood functional and obtain a new class of statistics. The resulting method can be applied to data from a network consisting of any number of detectors with arbitrary detector orientations. The method allows us reconstruction of the source coordinates and the waveforms of two polarization components of a gravitational wave. We study the performance of the method with numerical simulations and find the reconstruction of the source coordinates to be more accurate than in the standard likelihood method.
Physical Review D | 2011
S. Klimenko; G. Vedovato; M. Drago; G. Mazzolo; Guenakh Mitselmakher; C. Pankow; G. A. Prodi; V. Re; F. Salemi; I. Yakushin
Coincident observations with gravitational wave (GW) detectors and other astronomical instruments are among the main objectives of the experiments with the network of LIGO, Virgo, and GEO detectors. They will become a necessary part of the future GW astronomy as the next generation of advanced detectors comes online. The success of such joint observations directly depends on the source localization capabilities of the GW detectors. In this paper we present studies of the sky localization of transient GW sources with the future advanced detector networks and describe their fundamental properties. By reconstructing sky coordinates of ad hoc signals injected into simulated detector noise, we study the accuracy of the source localization and its dependence on the strength of injected signals, waveforms, and network configurations.
Physical Review D | 2016
S. Klimenko; G. Vedovato; M. Drago; F. Salemi; V. Tiwari; G. A. Prodi; C. Lazzaro; K. Ackley; S. Tiwari; C. F. Da Silva; Guenakh Mitselmakher
We present a method for detection and reconstruction of the gravitational-wave (GW) transients with the networks of advanced detectors. Originally designed to search for transients with the initial GW detectors, it uses signicantly improved algorithms, which enhances both the low-latency searches with rapid localization of GW events for the electro-magnetic followup and high condence detection of a broad range of the transient GW sources. In the paper we present the analytic framework of the method. Following a short description of the core analysis algorithms, we introduce a novel approach to the reconstruction of the GW polarization from a pattern of detector responses to a GW signal. This polarization pattern is a unique signature of an arbitrary GW signal that can be measured independent from the other source parameters. The polarization measurements enable rapid reconstruction of the GW waveforms, sky localization and helps identication of the source origin.
Physical Review D | 2013
P. Avery; D. Bourilkov; Mingshui Chen; T. Cheng; A. Drozdetskiy; James S. Gainer; Andrey Korytov; K. Matchev; P. Milenovic; Guenakh Mitselmakher; M. Park; A. Rinkevicius; M. Snowball
The importance of the H ! ZZ ! 4‘ ‘‘golden’’ channel was shown by its major role in the discovery, by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations, of a Higgs-like boson with mass near 125 GeV. We analyze the discrimination power of the matrix element method both for separating the signal from the irreducible ZZ background and for distinguishing various spin and parity hypotheses describing a signal in this channel. We show that the proper treatment of interference effects associated with permutations of identical leptons in the 4e and 4� final states plays an important role in achieving the best sensitivity in measuring the properties of the newly discovered boson. We provide a code, MEKD, that calculates kinematic discriminants based on the full leading-order matrix elements and which will aid experimentalists and phenomenologists in their continuing studies of the H ! ZZ ! 4‘ channel.
Physical Review D | 2014
Mingshui Chen; T. Cheng; James S. Gainer; Andrey Korytov; K. Matchev; P. Milenovic; Guenakh Mitselmakher; M. Park; A. Rinkevicius; M. Snowball
We present a general procedure for measuring the tensor structure of the coupling of the scalar Higgs-like boson recently discovered at the LHC to two Z bosons, including the effects of interference among different operators. To motivate our concern with this interference, we explore the parameter space of the couplings in the effective theory describing these interactions and illustrate the effects of interference on the differential dilepton mass distributions. Kinematic discriminants for performing coupling measurements that utilize the effects of interference are developed and described. We present projections for the sensitivity of coupling measurements that use these discriminants in future LHC operation in a variety of physics scenarios.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2006
Soumya Mohanty; M. Rakhmanov; S. Klimenko; Guenakh Mitselmakher
The detection and estimation of gravitational wave burst signals, with a priori unknown polarization waveforms, requires the use of data from a network of detectors. Maximizing the network likelihood functional over all waveforms and sky positions yields point estimates for them as well as a detection statistic. However, the transformation from the data to estimates can become ill-conditioned over parts of the sky, resulting in significant errors in estimation. We modify the likelihood procedure by introducing a penalty functional which suppresses candidate solutions that display large signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) variability as the source is displaced on the sky. Simulations show that the resulting network analysis method performs significantly better in estimating the sky position of a source. Further, this method can be applied to any network, irrespective of the number or mutual alignment of detectors.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2012
V. Necula; S. Klimenko; Guenakh Mitselmakher
The time-frequency transforms are important tools for identification of transient events in the output of the gravitational-wave detectors. Produced by the terrestrial and possibly by astrophysical sources, the transient events can be identified as patterns on the time-frequency plane with the excess power above stationary detector noise. In this paper we consider a particular case of the Wilson-Daubechies time-frequency transform for use in the gravitational-wave burst analysis. The presented Wilson-Daubechies basis shares some properties with the Gabor frames, but circumvents the Balian-Low theorem. It also shares similarity with the Meyer wavelet, which is actively used in the gravitational-wave burst analysis. The main advantages of the Wilson-Daubechies transform are the low computational cost, spectral leakage control, flexible structure of the frequency sub-bands, and the existence of the analytic time-delay filters, which are important for localization of the gravitational-wave sources in the sky. These properties of the Wilson-Daubechies transform may prove useful not only in the transient analysis, but also in other areas of the gravitational wave data analysis and detector characterization.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2016
V. Tiwari; S. Klimenko; V. Necula; Guenakh Mitselmakher
The excess energy method is used in searches for gravitational waves (GWs) produced by sources with poorly modeled characteristics. It identifies GW events by searching for coincident excess energy in a GW detector network. While it is sensitive to a wide range of signal morphologies, the energy outliers can be populated by background noise events (background), thereby reducing the statistical confidence of a true signal. However, if the physics of the source is partially understood, weak model-dependent constraints can be imposed to suppress the background. This letter presents the novel idea of using the reconstructed chirp mass along with two goodness of fit parameters for suppressing background when a search is focused on GWs produced from the compact binary coalescence.Excess energy method is used in searches of gravitational waves (GWs) produced from sources with poorly modeled characteristics. It identifies GW events by searching for a coincidence appearance of excess energy in a GW detector network. While it is sensitive to a wide range of signal morphologies, the energy outliers can be populated by background noise events (background), thereby reducing the statistical confidence of a true signal. However, if the physics of the source is partially understood, weak model dependent constraints can be imposed to suppress the background. This letter presents a novel idea of using the reconstructed chirp mass along with two goodness of fit parameters for suppressing background when search is focused on GW produced from the compact binary coalescence.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2009
C. Pankow; Sergey Klimenko; Guenakh Mitselmakher; I. Yakushin; G. Vedovato; M. Drago; R. A. Mercer; P. Ajith
Compact binary coalescence (CBC) is one of the most promising sources of gravitational waves. These sources are usually searched for with matched filters which require accurate calculation of the GW waveforms and generation of large template banks. We present a complementary search technique based on algorithms used in un-modeled searches. Initially designed for detection of un-modeled bursts, which can span a very large set of waveform morphologies, the search algorithm presented here is constrained for targeted detection of the smaller subset of CBC signals. The constraint is based on the assumption of elliptical polarization for signals received at the detector. We expect that the algorithm is sensitive to CBC signals in a wide range of masses, mass ratios and spin parameters. In preparation for the analysis of data from the fifth LIGO-Virgo science run (S5), we performed preliminary studies of the algorithm on test data. We present the sensitivity of the search to different types of simulated binary black hole waveforms. Also, we discuss how to extend the results of the test run into a search over all of the current LIGO-Virgo data set.