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

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Featured researches published by M. Drago.


Physical Review D | 2011

Localization of gravitational wave sources with networks of advanced detectors

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

Proposed search for the detection of gravitational waves from eccentric binary black holes

V. Tiwari; Sergey Klimenko; N. Christensen; E. A. Huerta; S. R P Mohapatra; A. Gopakumar; M. Haney; P. Ajith; S. T. McWilliams; G. Vedovato; M. Drago; F. Salemi; G. A. Prodi; C. Lazzaro; S. Tiwari; G. Mitselmakher; F. Da Silva

Most compact binary systems are expected to circularize before the frequency of emitted gravitational waves (GWs) enters the sensitivity band of the ground based interferometric detectors. However, several mechanisms have been proposed for the formation of binary systems, which retain eccentricity throughout their lifetimes. Since no matched-filtering algorithm has been developed to extract continuous GW signals from compact binaries on orbits with low to moderate values of eccentricity, and available algorithms to detect binaries on quasicircular orbits are suboptimal to recover these events, in this paper we propose a search method for detection of gravitational waves produced from the coalescences of eccentric binary black holes (eBBH). We study the search sensitivity and the false alarm rates on a segment of data from the second joint science run of LIGO and Virgo detectors, and discuss the implications of the eccentric binary search for the advanced GW detectors.


Physical Review D | 2012

Multimessenger Science Reach and Analysis Method for Common Sources of Gravitational Waves and High-energy Neutrinos

B. Baret; I. Bartos; B. Bouhou; E. Chassande-Mottin; A. Corsi; Irene Di Palma; C. Donzaud; M. Drago; C. Finley; G. Jones; Sergey Klimenko; A. Kouchner; S. Márka; Zsuzsa Marka; L. Moscoso; M. A. Papa; T. Pradier; G. A. Prodi; P. Raffai; V. Re; J. Rollins; F. Salemi; Patrick J. Sutton; M. Tse; Véronique Van Elewyck; G. Vedovato

We present the baseline multimessenger analysis method for the joint observations of gravitational waves (GW) and high-energy neutrinos (HEN), together with a detailed analysis of the expected science reach of the joint search. The analysis method combines data from GW and HEN detectors, and uses the blue-luminosity-weighted distribution of galaxies. We derive expected GW+HEN source rate upper limits for a wide range of source parameters covering several emission models. Using published sensitivities of externally triggered searches, we derive joint upper limit estimates both for the ongoing analysis with the initial LIGO-Virgo GW detectors with the partial IceCube detector (22 strings) HEN detector and for projected results to advanced LIGO-Virgo detectors with the completed IceCube (86 strings). We discuss the constraints these upper limits impose on some existing GW+HEN emission models.


Physical Review D | 2016

Leveraging waveform complexity for confident detection of gravitational waves

J. B. Kanner; T. B. Littenberg; Neil J. Cornish; Meg Millhouse; Enia Xhakaj; F. Salemi; M. Drago; G. Vedovato; Sergey Klimenko

The recent completion of Advanced LIGO suggests that gravitational waves may soon be directly observed. Past searches for gravitational-wave transients have been impacted by transient noise artifacts, known as glitches, introduced into LIGO data due to instrumental and environmental effects. In this work, we explore how waveform complexity, instead of signal-to-noise ratio, can be used to rank event candidates and distinguish short duration astrophysical signals from glitches. We test this framework using a new hierarchical pipeline that directly compares the Bayesian evidence of explicit signal and glitch models. The hierarchical pipeline is shown to perform well and, in particular, to allow high-confidence detections of a range of waveforms at a realistic signal-to-noise ratio with a two-detector network.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2015

Regression of Environmental Noise in LIGO Data

V. Tiwari; M. Drago; Valery Frolov; Sergey Klimenko; Guenakh Mitselmakher; V. Necula; G. A. Prodi; V. Re; F. Salemi; G. Vedovato; I. Yakushin

We address the problem of noise regression in the output of gravitational-wave (GW) interferometers, using data from the physical environmental monitors (PEM). The objective of the regression analysis is to predict environmental noise in the gravitational-wave channel from the PEM measurements. One of the most promising regression method is based on the construction of Wiener-Kolmogorov filters. Using this method, the seismic noise cancellation from the LIGO GW channel has already been performed. In the presented approach the Wiener-Kolmogorov method has been extended, incorporating banks of Wiener filters in the time-frequency domain, multi-channel analysis and regulation schemes, which greatly enhance the versatility of the regression analysis. Also we presents the first results on regression of the bi-coherent noise in the LIGO data.


Physical Review D | 2014

Prospects for intermediate mass black hole binary searches with advanced gravitational-wave detectors

G. Mazzolo; F. Salemi; M. Drago; V. Necula; C. Pankow; G. A. Prodi; V. Re; V. Tiwari; G. Vedovato; I. Yakushin; Sergey Klimenko

We estimated the sensitivity of the upcoming advanced ground-based gravitational-wave observatories (the LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA interferometers) to coalescing intermediate mass black hole binaries (IMBHB). We added waveforms modeling the gravitational radiation emitted by IMBHBs to simulated data from detectors and searched for the injected signals with the coherent WaveBurst algorithm. The tested parameter space of the binaries covers nonspinning IMBHBs with source-frame total masses between 50 and 1050M⊙ and mass ratios between 1=6 and 1. We found that advanced detectors could be sensitive to these systems up to a range of a few Gpc. A theoretical model was adopted to estimate the expected observation rates, yielding up to a few tens of events per year. Thus, our results indicate that advanced detectors will have a reasonable chance to collect the first direct evidence for intermediate mass black holes and to open a new, intriguing channel for probing the Universe over cosmological scales.


Physical Review D | 2018

Estimation of the gravitational wave polarizations from a nontemplate search

Irene Di Palma; M. Drago

Gravitational wave astronomy is just beginning, after the recent success of the four direct detections of binary black hole (BBH) mergers, the first observation from a binary neutron star inspiral and with the expectation of many more events to come. Given the possibility to detect waves from not perfectly modeled astrophysical processes, it is fundamental to be ready to calculate the polarization waveforms in the case of searches using non-template algorithms. In such case, the waveform polarizations are the only quantities that contain direct information about the generating process. We present the performance of a new valuable tool to estimate the inverse solution of gravitational wave transient signals, starting from the analysis of the signal properties of a non-template algorithm that is open to a wider class of gravitational signals not covered by template algorithms. We highlight the contributions to the wave polarization associated with the detector response, the sky localization and the polarization angle of the source. In this paper we present the performances of such method and its implications by using two main classes of transient signals, resembling the limiting case for most simple and complicated morphologies. Performances are encouraging, for the tested waveforms: the correlation between the original and the reconstructed waveforms spans from better than 80% for simple morphologies to better than 50% for complicated ones. For a not-template search this results can be considered satisfactory to reconstruct the astrophysical progenitor.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2012

Multimessenger sources of gravitational waves and high-energy neutrinos: Science reach and analysis method

B. Baret; I. Bartos; B. Bouhou; E. Chassande-Mottin; A. Corsi; I. Di Palma; C. Donzaud; M. Drago; C. Finley; G. Jones; S. Klimenko; A. Kouchner; S. Márka; Z. Márka; L. Moscoso; M. Alessandra Papa; T. Pradier; G. A. Prodi; P. Raffai; V. Re; J. G. Rollins; F. Salemi; P. J. Sutton; M. Tse; V. Van Elewyck; G. Vedovato

Sources of gravitational waves are often expected to be observable through several messengers, such as gamma-rays, X-rays, optical, radio, and/or neutrino emission. The simultaneous observation of electromagnetic or neutrino emission with a gravitational-wave signal could be a crucial aspect for the first direct detection of gravitational waves. Furthermore, combining gravitational waves with electromagnetic and neutrino observations will enable the extraction of scientific insight that was hidden from us before. We discuss the method that enables the joint search with the LIGO-Virgo-IceCube-ANTARES global network, as well as its methodology, science reach, and outlook for the next generation of gravitational-wave detectors.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017

Enhancing the significance of gravitational wave bursts through signal classification

S. Vinciguerra; M. Drago; G. A. Prodi; S. Klimenko; C. Lazzaro; V. Necula; F. Salemi; V. Tiwari; M. C. Tringali; G. Vedovato

The quest to observe gravitational waves challenges our ability to discriminate signals from detector noise. This issue is especially relevant for transient gravitational waves searches with a robust eyes wide open approach, the so called all-sky burst searches. Here we show how signal classification methods inspired by broad astrophysical characteristics can be implemented in all-sky burst searches preserving their generality. In our case study, we apply a multivariate analyses based on artificial neural networks to classify waves emitted in compact binary coalescences. We enhance by orders of magnitude the significance of signals belonging to this broad astrophysical class against the noise background. Alternatively, at a given level of mis-classification of noise events, we can detect about 1/4 more of the total signal population. We also show that a more general strategy of signal classification can actually be performed, by testing the ability of artificial neural networks in discriminating different signal classes. The possible impact on future observations by the LIGO-Virgo network of detectors is discussed by analysing recoloured noise from previous LIGO-Virgo data with coherent WaveBurst, one of the flagship pipelines dedicated to all-sky searches for transient gravitational waves.


General Relativity and Gravitation | 2014

C7 multi-messenger astronomy of GW sources

M. Branchesi; G. Woan; P. Astone; I. Bartos; A. Colla; S. Covino; M. Drago; X. Fan; S. Frasca; Chad Hanna; Brynmor Haskell; J. S. Hazboun; I. S. Heng; Daniel E. Holz; Nathan K. Johnson-McDaniel; I. D. Jones; L. Keer; Sergey Klimenko; G. Kostas; S. Larson; Ilya Mandel; M. Mapelli; C. Messenger; G. Mazzolo; A. Melatos; Soumya Mohanty; V. Necula; M. E. Normandin; L. Obara; R. Opiela

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V. Necula

University of Florida

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V. Re

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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I. Yakushin

California Institute of Technology

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