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Dive into the research topics where M. Benacquista is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Benacquista.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2010

Predictions for the Rates of Compact Binary Coalescences Observable by Ground-based Gravitational-wave Detectors

J. Abadie; R. Abbott; M. Abernathy; T. Accadia; F. Acernese; C. Adams; R. Adhikari; B. Allen; G. Allen; E. Amador Ceron; S. Anderson; Warren G. Anderson; F. Antonucci; S Aoudia; M. A. Arain; M. C. Araya; M. Aronsson; K G Arun; S. Aston; P. Astone; D. Atkinson; S. Babak; S. Ballmer; D. Barker; F. Barone; P. Barriga; L. Barsotti; M. Barsuglia; M. A. Barton; I. Bartos

We present an up-to-date, comprehensive summary of the rates for all types of compact binary coalescence sources detectable by the initial and advanced versions of the ground-based gravitational-wave detectors LIGO and Virgo. Astrophysical estimates for compact-binary coalescence rates depend on a number of assumptions and unknown model parameters and are still uncertain. The most confident among these estimates are the rate predictions for coalescing binary neutron stars which are based on extrapolations from observed binary pulsars in our galaxy. These yield a likely coalescence rate of 100 Myr−1 per Milky Way Equivalent Galaxy (MWEG), although the rate could plausibly range from 1 Myr−1 MWEG−1 to 1000 Myr−1 MWEG−1 (Kalogera et al 2004 Astrophys. J. 601 L179; Kalogera et al 2004 Astrophys. J. 614 L137 (erratum)). We convert coalescence rates into detection rates based on data from the LIGO S5 and Virgo VSR2 science runs and projected sensitivities for our advanced detectors. Using the detector sensitivities derived from these data, we find a likely detection rate of 0.02 per year for Initial LIGO–Virgo interferometers, with a plausible range between 2 × 10−4 and 0.2 per year. The likely binary neutron–star detection rate for the Advanced LIGO–Virgo network increases to 40 events per year, with a range between 0.4 and 400 per year.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

Search for gravitational-wave bursts associated with gamma-ray bursts using data from LIGO science run 5 and VIRGO science run 1.

B. Abbott; R. Abbott; F. Acernese; R. Adhikari; P. Ajith; B. Allen; G. Allen; R. Amin; S. Anderson; W. G. Anderson; F. Antonucci; S. Aoudia; M. C. Araya; H. Armandula; P. Armor; K. G. Arun; Y. Aso; S. Aston; P. Astone; P. Aufmuth; C. Aulbert; S. Babak; P. Baker; G. Ballardin; S. Ballmer; C. Barker; D. Barker; F. Barone; B. Barr; P. Barriga

We present the results of a search for gravitational-wave bursts associated with 137 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) that were detected by satellite-based gamma-ray experiments during the fifth LIGO science run and first Virgo science run. The data used in this analysis were collected from 2005 November 4 to 2007 October 1, and most of the GRB triggers were from the Swift satellite. The search uses a coherent network analysis method that takes into account the different locations and orientations of the interferometers at the three LIGO-Virgo sites. We find no evidence for gravitational-wave burst signals associated with this sample of GRBs. Using simulated short-duration (<1 s) waveforms, we set upper limits on the amplitude of gravitational waves associated with each GRB. We also place lower bounds on the distance to each GRB under the assumption of a fixed energy emission in gravitational waves, with typical limits of D ~ 15 Mpc (E_GW^iso / 0.01 M_o c^2)^1/2 for emission at frequencies around 150 Hz, where the LIGO-Virgo detector network has best sensitivity. We present astrophysical interpretations and implications of these results, and prospects for corresponding searches during future LIGO-Virgo runs.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Compact binaries in star clusters – I. Black hole binaries inside globular clusters

J. M. B. Downing; M. Benacquista; Mirek Giersz; Rainer Spurzem

We study the compact binary population in star clusters, focusing on binaries containing black holes, using a self-consistent Monte Carlo treatment of dynamics and full stellar evolution. We find that the black holes experience strong mass segregation and become centrally concentrated. In the core the black holes interact strongly with each other and black hole–black hole binaries are formed very efficiently. The strong interactions, however, also destroy or eject the black hole–black hole binaries. We find no black hole–black hole mergers within our simulations but produce many hard escapers that will merge in the Galactic field within a Hubble time. We also find several highly eccentric black hole–black hole binaries that are potential Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) sources, suggesting that star clusters are interesting targets for space-based detectors. We conclude that star clusters must be taken into account when predicting compact binary population statistics.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

THE LISA GRAVITATIONAL WAVE FOREGROUND: A STUDY OF DOUBLE WHITE DWARFS

Ashley J. Ruiter; Krzysztof Belczynski; M. Benacquista; Shane L. Larson; Gabriel Williams

Double white dwarfs are expected to be a source of confusion-limited noise for the future gravitational wave observatory LISA. In a specific frequency range, this ‘foreground noise’ is predicted to rise above the instrumental noise and hinder the detection of other types of signals, e.g., gravitational waves arising from stellar mass objects inspiraling into massive black holes. In many previous studies only detached populations of compact object binaries have been considered in estimating the LISA gravitational wave foreground signal. Here, we investigate the influence of compact object detached and Roche-Lobe Overflow Galactic binaries on the shape and strength of the LISA signal. Since > 99% of remnant binaries which have orbital periods within the LISA sensitivity range are white dwarf binaries, we consider only these binaries when calculating the LISA signal. We find that the contribution of RLOF binaries to the foreground noise is negligible at low frequencies, but becomes significant at higher frequencies, pushing the frequency at which the foreground noise drops below the instrumental noise to > 6 mHz. We find that it is important to consider the population of mass transferring binaries in order to obtain an accurate assessment of the foreground noise on the LISA data stream. However, we estimate that there still exists a sizeable number (� 11300) of Galactic double white dwarf binaries which will have a signal-to-noise ratio > 5, and thus will be potentially resolvable with LISA. We present the LISA gravitational wave signal from the Galactic population of white dwarf binaries, show the most important formation channels contributing to the LISA disc and bulge populations and discuss the implications of these new findings. Subject headings: binaries: close — stars: evolution, white dwarfs — gravitational waves — Galaxy: stellar content


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

First search for gravitational waves from the youngest known neutron star

J. Abadie; B. Abbott; R. Abbott; M. Abernathy; C. Adams; R. Adhikari; P. Ajith; B. Allen; G. Allen; E. Amador Ceron; R. Amin; S. Anderson; W. G. Anderson; M. A. Arain; M. C. Araya; M. Aronsson; Y. Aso; S. Aston; D. Atkinson; P. Aufmuth; C. Aulbert; S. Babak; P. Baker; S. Ballmer; D. Barker; S. Barnum; B. Barr; P. Barriga; L. Barsotti; M. A. Barton

We present a search for periodic gravitational waves from the neutron star in the supernova remnant Cassiopeia A. The search coherently analyzes data in a 12 day interval taken from the fifth science run of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. It searches gravitational-wave frequencies from 100 to 300 Hz and covers a wide range of first and second frequency derivatives appropriate for the age of the remnant and for different spin-down mechanisms. No gravitational-wave signal was detected. Within the range of search frequencies, we set 95% confidence upper limits of (0.7-1.2) × 10–24 on the intrinsic gravitational-wave strain, (0.4-4) × 10–4 on the equatorial ellipticity of the neutron star, and 0.005-0.14 on the amplitude of r-mode oscillations of the neutron star. These direct upper limits beat indirect limits derived from energy conservation and enter the range of theoretical predictions involving crystalline exotic matter or runaway r-modes. This paper is also the first gravitational-wave search to present upper limits on the r-mode amplitude.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Compact Binaries in Star Clusters II - Escapers and Detection Rates

J. M. B. Downing; M. Benacquista; Mirek Giersz; Rainer Spurzem

We use a self-consistent Monte Carlo treatment of stellar dynamics to investigate black hole binaries that are dynamically ejected from globular clusters to determine if they will be gravitational wave sources. We find that many of the ejected binaries have initially short periods and will merge within a Hubble time due to gravitational wave radiation. Thus they are potential sources for ground-based gravitational wave detectors. We estimate the yearly detection rate for current and advanced groundbased detectors and find a modest enhancement over the rate predicted for binaries produced by pure stellar evolution in galactic fields. We also find that many of the ejected binaries will pass through the longer wavelength Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) band and may be individually resolvable. We find a low probability that the Galaxy will contain a binary in the LISA band during its three-year mission. Some such binaries may, however, be detectable at Mpc distances implying that there may be resolvable stellar-mass LISA sources beyond our Galaxy. We conclude that globular clusters have a significant effect on the detection rate of ground-based detectors and may produce interesting LISA sources in local group galaxies.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Triplets of supermassive black holes: astrophysics, gravitational waves and detection

Pau Amaro-Seoane; Alberto Sesana; Loren Hoffman; M. Benacquista; Christoph Eichhorn; Junichiro Makino; Rainer Spurzem

Supermassive black holes (SMBHs) found in the centers of many galaxies are understood to play a fundamental, active role in the cosmological structure formation process. In hierarchical formation scenarios, SMBHs are expected to form binaries following the merger of their host galaxies. If these binaries do not coalesce before the merger with a third galaxy, the formation of a black hole triple system is possible. Numerical simulations of the dynamics of triples within galaxy cores exhibit phases of very high eccentricity (as high as e � 0:99). During these phases, intense bursts of gravitational radiation can be emitted at orbital periapsis, which produces a gravitational wave signal at frequencies substantially higher than the orbital frequency. The likelihood of detection of these bursts with pulsar timing and the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is estimated using several population models of SMBHs with masses & 10 7 M�. Assuming 10% or more of binaries are in triple systems, we find that up to a few dozen of these bursts will produce residuals > 1 ns, within the sensitivity range of forthcoming pulsar timing arrays (PTAs). However, most of such bursts will be washed out in the underlying confusion noise produced by all the other ’standard’ SMBH binaries emitting in the same frequency window. A detailed data analysis study would be required to assess resolvability of such sources. Implementing a basic resolvability criterion, we find that the chance of catching a resolvable burst at a one nanosecond precision level is 2 50%, depending on the adopted SMBH evolution model. On the other hand, the probability of detecting bursts produced by massive binaries (masses & 10 7 M�) with LISA is negligible.


Living Reviews in Relativity | 2002

Relativistic Binaries in Globular Clusters

M. Benacquista

Galactic globular clusters are old, dense star systems typically containing 104–106 stars. As an old population of stars, globular clusters contain many collapsed and degenerate objects. As a dense population of stars, globular clusters are the scene of many interesting close dynamical interactions between stars. These dynamical interactions can alter the evolution of individual stars and can produce tight binary systems containing one or two compact objects. In this review, we discuss theoretical models of globular cluster evolution and binary evolution, techniques for simulating this evolution that leads to relativistic binaries, and current and possible future observational evidence for this population. Our discussion of globular cluster evolution will focus on the processes that boost the production of tight binary systems and the subsequent interaction of these binaries that can alter the properties of both bodies and can lead to exotic objects. Direct N-body integrations and Fokker-Planck simulations of the evolution of globular clusters that incorporate tidal interactions and lead to predictions of relativistic binary populations are also discussed. We discuss the current observational evidence for cataclysmic variables, millisecond pulsars, and low-mass X-ray binaries as well as possible future detection of relativistic binaries with gravitational radiation.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2008

The Mock LISA Data Challenges: from Challenge 1B to Challenge 3

S. Babak; John G. Baker; M. Benacquista; Neil J. Cornish; Jeff Crowder; Shane L. Larson; E. Plagnol; Edward K. Porter; M. Vallisneri; Alberto Vecchio; Keith A. Arnaud; Leor Barack; Arkadiusz Blaut; Curt Cutler; S. Fairhurst; Jonathan R. Gair; Xuefei Gong; I. W. Harry; Deepak Khurana; A. Królak; Ilya Mandel; R. Prix; B. S. Sathyaprakash; P. Savov; Yu Shang; M. Trias; J. Veitch; Yan Wang; L. Wen; James Whelan

The Mock LISA Data Challenges are a programme to demonstrate and encourage the development of LISA data-analysis capabilities, tools and techniques. At the time of this workshop, three rounds of challenges had been completed, and the next was about to start. In this paper we provide a critical analysis of the entries to the latest completed round, Challenge 1B. The entries confirm the consolidation of a range of data-analysis techniques for galactic and massive-black-hole binaries, and they include the first convincing examples of detection and parameter estimation of extreme-mass-ratio inspiral sources. In this paper we also introduce the next round, Challenge 3. Its data sets feature more realistic waveform models (e.g., galactic binaries may now chirp, and massive-black-hole binaries may precess due to spin interactions), as well as new source classes (bursts from cosmic strings, isotropic stochastic backgrounds) and more complicated nonsymmetric instrument noise.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

DOUBLE COMPACT OBJECTS AS LOW-FREQUENCY GRAVITATIONAL WAVE SOURCES

Kryzysztof Belczynski; M. Benacquista; Tomasz Bulik

We study the Galactic field population of double compact objects (DCOs; NS-NS, BH-NS, BH-BH binaries) to investigate the number (if any) of these systems that can potentially be detected with the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) at low gravitational wave frequencies. We calculate the Galactic numbers and physical properties of these binaries and show their relative contributions from the disk, bulge, and halo. Although the Galaxy hosts ~105 DCO binaries emitting low-frequency gravitational waves, only a handful of these objects in the disk will be detectable with LISA, but none from the halo or bulge. This is because the bulk of these binaries are NS-NS systems with high eccentricities and long orbital periods (weeks/months) causing inefficient signal accumulation (a small number of signal bursts at periastron passage in one year of LISA observations) and rendering them undetectable in the majority of these cases. We adopt two evolutionary models that differ in their treatment of the common envelope (CE) phase that is a major (and still mostly unknown) process in the formation of close DCOs. Depending on the evolutionary model adopted, our calculations indicate the likely detection of about four NS-NS binaries and two BH-BH systems (model A; likely survival of progenitors through CE) or only a couple of NS-NS binaries (model B; suppression of the DCO formation due to CE mergers).

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Joseph D. Romano

University of Texas at Austin

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Ashley J. Ruiter

Australian National University

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John G. Baker

Goddard Space Flight Center

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S. Anderson

California Institute of Technology

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Keith A. Arnaud

Goddard Space Flight Center

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M. Vallisneri

California Institute of Technology

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