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Featured researches published by L. Blackburn.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Fermi GBM Observations of LIGO Gravitational Wave event GW150914

V. Connaughton; E. Burns; Adam Goldstein; L. Blackburn; M. S. Briggs; Bin-Bin Zhang; J. B. Camp; N. Christensen; C. M. Hui; P. Jenke; T. Littenberg; J. E. McEnery; Judith Lea Racusin; P. Shawhan; L. P. Singer; J. Veitch; C. Wilson-Hodge; P. N. Bhat; E. Bissaldi; W. Cleveland; G. Fitzpatrick; M. H. Gibby; A. von Kienlin; R. M. Kippen; S. McBreen; B. Mailyan; Charles A. Meegan; W. S. Paciesas; Robert D. Preece; O. J. Roberts

With an instantaneous view of 70% of the sky, the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) is an excellent partner in the search for electromagnetic counterparts to gravitational-wave (GW) events. GBM observations at the time of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) event GW150914 reveal the presence of a weak transient above 50 keV, 0.4 s after the GW event, with a false-alarm probability of 0.0022 (2.9(sigma)). This weak transient lasting 1 s was not detected by any other instrument and does not appear to be connected with other previously known astrophysical, solar, terrestrial, or magnetospheric activity. Its localization is ill-constrained but consistent with the direction of GW150914. The duration and spectrum of the transient event are consistent with a weak short gamma-ray burst (GRB) arriving at a large angle to the direction in which Fermi was pointing where the GBM detector response is not optimal. If the GBM transient is associated with GW150914, then this electromagnetic signal from a stellar mass black hole binary merger is unexpected. We calculate a luminosity in hard X-ray emission between 1 keV and 10 MeV of 1.8(sup +1.5, sub -1.0) x 10(exp 49) erg/s. Future joint observations of GW events by LIGO/Virgo and Fermi GBM could reveal whether the weak transient reported here is a plausible counterpart to GW150914 or a chance coincidence, and will further probe the connection between compact binary mergers and short GRBs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

An Ordinary Short Gamma-Ray Burst with Extraordinary Implications: Fermi-GBM Detection of GRB 170817A

A. Goldstein; P. Veres; E. Burns; M. S. Briggs; R. Hamburg; D. Kocevski; C. Wilson-Hodge; Robert D. Preece; S. Poolakkil; O. J. Roberts; C. M. Hui; V. Connaughton; Judith Lea Racusin; A. von Kienlin; T. Dal Canton; N. Christensen; T. B. Littenberg; K. Siellez; L. Blackburn; J. E. Broida; E. Bissaldi; W. Cleveland; M. H. Gibby; R. M. Kippen; S. McBreen; J. E. McEnery; Charles A. Meegan; W. S. Paciesas; M. Stanbro

On August 17, 2017 at 12:41:06 UTC the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) detected and triggered on the short gamma-ray burst GRB 170817A. Approximately 1.7 s prior to this GRB, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) triggered on a binary compact merger candidate associated with the GRB. This is the first unambiguous coincident observation of gravitational waves and electromagnetic radiation from a single astrophysical source and marks the start of gravitational-wave multi-messenger astronomy. We report the GBM observations and analysis of this ordinary short GRB, which extraordinarily confirms that at least some short GRBs are produced by binary compact mergers.


Science | 2015

Resolved magnetic-field structure and variability near the event horizon of Sagittarius A∗

Michael D. Johnson; Vincent L. Fish; Sheperd S. Doeleman; D. P. Marrone; R. L. Plambeck; J. F. C. Wardle; Kazunori Akiyama; Keiichi Asada; Christopher Beaudoin; L. Blackburn; R. Blundell; Geoffrey C. Bower; Christiaan Brinkerink; Avery E. Broderick; R. J. Cappallo; Andrew A. Chael; Geoffrey Crew; Jason Dexter; Matt Dexter; Robert Freund; Per Friberg; Roman Gold; M. A. Gurwell; Paul T. P. Ho; Mareki Honma; Makoto Inoue; Michael Kosowsky; T. P. Krichbaum; James W. Lamb; Abraham Loeb

Magnetic fields near the event horizon Astronomers have long sought to examine a black holes event horizon—the boundary around the black hole within which nothing can escape. Johnson et al. used sophisticated interferometry techniques to combine data from millimeter-wavelength telescopes around the world. They measured polarization just outside the event horizon of Sgr A*, the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy, the Milky Way. The polarization is a signature of ordered magnetic fields generated in the accretion disk around the black hole. The results help to explain how black holes accrete gas and launch jets of material into their surroundings. Science, this issue p. 1242 Magnetic fields around the event horizon of a supermassive black hole have been probed. Near a black hole, differential rotation of a magnetized accretion disk is thought to produce an instability that amplifies weak magnetic fields, driving accretion and outflow. These magnetic fields would naturally give rise to the observed synchrotron emission in galaxy cores and to the formation of relativistic jets, but no observations to date have been able to resolve the expected horizon-scale magnetic-field structure. We report interferometric observations at 1.3-millimeter wavelength that spatially resolve the linearly polarized emission from the Galactic Center supermassive black hole, Sagittarius A*. We have found evidence for partially ordered magnetic fields near the event horizon, on scales of ~6 Schwarzschild radii, and we have detected and localized the intrahour variability associated with these fields.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

PERSISTENT ASYMMETRIC STRUCTURE OF SAGITTARIUS A* ON EVENT HORIZON SCALES

Vincent L. Fish; Michael D. Johnson; Sheperd S. Doeleman; Avery E. Broderick; Dimitrios Psaltis; Ru-Sen Lu; Kazunori Akiyama; W. Alef; Juan C. Algaba; Keiichi Asada; Christopher Beaudoin; Alessandra Bertarini; L. Blackburn; R. Blundell; Geoffrey C. Bower; Christiaan Brinkerink; R. J. Cappallo; Andrew A. Chael; Richard A. Chamberlin; Chi-kwan Chan; Geoffrey Crew; Jason Dexter; Matt Dexter; Sergio A. Dzib; H. Falcke; Robert Freund; Per Friberg; Christopher Greer; M. A. Gurwell; Paul T. P. Ho

The Galactic Center black hole Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*) is a prime observing target for the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), which can resolve the 1.3 mm emission from this source on angular scales comparable to that of the general relativistic shadow. Previous EHT observations have used visibility amplitudes to infer the morphology of the millimeter-wavelength emission. Potentially much richer source information is contained in the phases. We report on 1.3 mm phase information on Sgr A* obtained with the EHT on a total of 13 observing nights over 4 years. Closure phases, the sum of visibility phases along a closed triangle of interferometer baselines, are used because they are robust against phase corruptions introduced by instrumentation and the rapidly variable atmosphere. The median closure phase on a triangle including telescopes in California, Hawaii, and Arizona is nonzero. This result conclusively demonstrates that the millimeter emission is asymmetric on scales of a few Schwarzschild radii and can be used to break 180-degree rotational ambiguities inherent from amplitude data alone. The stability of the sign of the closure phase over most observing nights indicates persistent asymmetry in the image of Sgr A* that is not obscured by refraction due to interstellar electrons along the line of sight.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

The Intrinsic Shape of Sagittarius A* at 3.5-mm Wavelength

Gisela N. Ortiz-León; Michael D. Johnson; Sheperd S. Doeleman; L. Blackburn; Vincent L. Fish; Laurent Loinard; M. J. Reid; Edgar Castillo; Andrew A. Chael; Antonio Hernández-Gómez; David H. Hughes; J. León-Tavares; Ru-Sen Lu; A. Montaña; Gopal Narayanan; Katherine A. Rosenfeld; D. A. Sanchez; F. Peter Schloerb; Zhi-Qiang Shen; Hotaka Shiokawa; Jason SooHoo; Laura Vertatschitsch

The radio emission from Sgr A


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2015

R2DBE: A Wideband Digital Backend for the Event Horizon Telescope

Laura Vertatschitsch; Rurik A. Primiani; André Young; Jonathan Weintroub; Geoffrey Crew; S. R. McWhirter; Christopher Beaudoin; Sheperd S. Doeleman; L. Blackburn

^\ast


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

On the interpretation of the Fermi-GBM transient observed in coincidence with LIGO gravitational-wave event GW150914

V. Connaughton; E. Burns; Adam Goldstein; L. Blackburn; M. S. Briggs; N. Christensen; C. M. Hui; D. Kocevski; T. B. Littenberg; J. E. McEnery; Judith Lea Racusin; P. Shawhan; J. Veitch; Colleen Anne Wilson-Hodge; P. N. Bhat; E. Bissaldi; W. Cleveland; M. H. Gibby; A. von Kienlin; R. M. Kippen; S. McBreen; Charles A. Meegan; W. S. Paciesas; Robert D. Preece; O. J. Roberts; M. Stanbro; P. Veres

is thought to be powered by accretion onto a supermassive black hole of


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

Detection of Intrinsic Source Structure at ~3 Schwarzschild Radii with Millimeter-VLBI Observations of SAGITTARIUS A*

Ru-Sen Lu; T. P. Krichbaum; Alan L. Roy; Vincent L. Fish; Sheperd S. Doeleman; Michael D. Johnson; Kazunori Akiyama; Dimitrios Psaltis; W. Alef; Keiichi Asada; Christopher Beaudoin; Alessandra Bertarini; L. Blackburn; R. Blundell; Geoffrey C. Bower; Christiaan Brinkerink; Avery E. Broderick; R. J. Cappallo; Geoffrey Crew; Jason Dexter; Matt Dexter; H. Falcke; Robert Freund; Per Friberg; Christopher Greer; M. A. Gurwell; Paul T. P. Ho; Mareki Honma; Makoto Inoue; J. S. Kim

\sim\! 4\times10^6~ \rm{M}_\odot


ieee international symposium on phased array systems and technology | 2016

Performance assessment of an adaptive beamformer for the submillimeter array

André Young; Rurik A. Primiani; Jonathan Weintroub; James M. Moran; Ken H. Young; L. Blackburn; Michael D. Johnson; Richard Wilson

at the Galactic Center. At millimeter wavelengths, Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations can directly resolve the bright innermost accretion region of Sgr A


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

Analysis of Sub-threshold Short Gamma-Ray Bursts in Fermi GBM Data

D. Kocevski; E. Burns; A. Goldstein; T. Dal Canton; M. S. Briggs; L. Blackburn; P. Veres; C. M. Hui; Rachel Hamburg; O. J. Roberts; C. Wilson-Hodge; V. Connaughton; Judith Lea Racusin; T. B. Littenberg; A. von Kienlin; E. Bissaldi

^\ast

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Vincent L. Fish

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Kazunori Akiyama

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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M. S. Briggs

University of Alabama in Huntsville

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V. Connaughton

Universities Space Research Association

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C. M. Hui

Marshall Space Flight Center

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Christopher Beaudoin

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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E. Burns

Goddard Space Flight Center

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