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

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Featured researches published by M. Pitkin.


Living Reviews in Relativity | 2000

Gravitational Wave Detection by Interferometry (Ground and Space)

M. Pitkin; S. Reid; S. Rowan; J. Hough

Significant progress has been made in recent years on the development of gravitational-wave detectors. Sources such as coalescing compact binary systems, neutron stars in low-mass X-ray binaries, stellar collapses and pulsars are all possible candidates for detection. The most promising design of gravitational-wave detector uses test masses a long distance apart and freely suspended as pendulums on Earth or in drag-free spacecraft. The main theme of this review is a discussion of the mechanical and optical principles used in the various long baseline systems in operation around the world — LIGO (USA), Virgo (Italy/France), TAMA300 and LCGT (Japan), and GEO600 (Germany/U.K.) — and in LISA, a proposed space-borne interferometer. A review of recent science runs from the current generation of ground-based detectors will be discussed, in addition to highlighting the astrophysical results gained thus far. Looking to the future, the major upgrades to LIGO (Advanced LIGO), Virgo (Advanced Virgo), LCGT and GEO600 (GEO-HF) will be completed over the coming years, which will create a network of detectors with the significantly improved sensitivity required to detect gravitational waves. Beyond this, the concept and design of possible future “third generation” gravitational-wave detectors, such as the Einstein Telescope (ET), will be discussed.


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.


Physical Review D | 2015

Parameter estimation for compact binaries with ground-based gravitational-wave observations using the LALInference software library

J. Veitch; V. Raymond; B. Farr; W. M. Farr; P. B. Graff; Salvatore Vitale; Ben Aylott; K. Blackburn; N. Christensen; M. W. Coughlin; Walter Del Pozzo; Farhan Feroz; Jonathan R. Gair; Carl-Johan Haster; Vicky Kalogera; T. B. Littenberg; Ilya Mandel; R. O'Shaughnessy; M. Pitkin; C. Rodriguez; Christian Röver; T. L. Sidery; R. J. E. Smith; Marc van der Sluys; Alberto Vecchio; W. D. Vousden; L. Wade

The Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo gravitational-wave (GW) detectors will begin operation in the coming years, with compact binary coalescence events a likely source for the first detections. The gravitational waveforms emitted directly encode information about the sources, including the masses and spins of the compact objects. Recovering the physical parameters of the sources from the GW observations is a key analysis task. This work describes the LALInference software library for Bayesian parameter estimation of compact binary signals, which builds on several previous methods to provide a well-tested toolkit which has already been used for several studies. We show that our implementation is able to correctly recover the parameters of compact binary signals from simulated data from the advanced GW detectors. We demonstrate this with a detailed comparison on three compact binary systems: a binary neutron star, a neutron star–black hole binary and a binary black hole, where we show a cross comparison of results obtained using three independent sampling algorithms. These systems were analyzed with nonspinning, aligned spin and generic spin configurations respectively, showing that consistent results can be obtained even with the full 15-dimensional parameter space of the generic spin configurations. We also demonstrate statistically that the Bayesian credible intervals we recover correspond to frequentist confidence intervals under correct prior assumptions by analyzing a set of 100 signals drawn from the prior. We discuss the computational cost of these algorithms, and describe the general and problem-specific sampling techniques we have used to improve the efficiency of sampling the compact binary coalescence parameter space.


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.


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 D | 2014

Reconstructing the Sky Location of Gravitational-Wave Detected Compact Binary Systems: Methodology for Testing and Comparison

T. Sidney; B. E. Aylott; N. Christensen; B. Farr; W. M. Farr; Farhan Feroz; Jonathan R. Gair; K. Grover; P. B. Graff; Chad Hanna; V. Kalogera; Ilya Mandel; R. O'Shaughnessy; M. Pitkin; Lawrence Price; V. Raymond; C. Roever; L. P. Singer; M. vanderSluys; Roger Smith; A. Vecchio; J. Veitch; S. Vitale

The problem of reconstructing the sky position of compact binary coalescences detected via gravitational waves is a central one for future observations with the ground-based network of gravitational-wave laser interferometers, such as Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo. Different techniques for sky localization have been independently developed. They can be divided in two broad categories: fully coherent Bayesian techniques, which are high latency and aimed at in-depth studies of all the parameters of a source, including sky position, and “triangulation-based” techniques, which exploit the data products from the search stage of the analysis to provide an almost real-time approximation of the posterior probability density function of the sky location of a detection candidate. These techniques have previously been applied to data collected during the last science runs of gravitational-wave detectors operating in the so-called initial configuration. Here, we develop and analyze methods for assessing the self consistency of parameter estimation methods and carrying out fair comparisons between different algorithms, addressing issues of efficiency and optimality. These methods are general, and can be applied to parameter estimation problems other than sky localization. We apply these methods to two existing sky localization techniques representing the two above-mentioned categories, using a set of simulated inspiral-only signals from compact binary systems with a total mass of ≤20M_⊙ and nonspinning components. We compare the relative advantages and costs of the two techniques and show that sky location uncertainties are on average a factor ≈20 smaller for fully coherent techniques than for the specific variant of the triangulation-based technique used during the last science runs, at the expense of a factor ≈1000 longer processing time.


Physical Review D | 2014

Robust parameter estimation for compact binaries with ground-based gravitational-wave observations using the LALInference software library

J. Veitch; V. Raymond; B. Farr; W. M. Farr; P. B. Graff; Salvatore Vitale; Ben Aylott; K. Blackburn; N. Christensen; M. W. Coughlin; Walter Del Pozzo; Farhan Feroz; Jonathan R. Gair; Carl-Johan Haster; Vicky Kalogera; T. B. Littenberg; Ilya Mandel; R. O'Shaughnessy; M. Pitkin; C. Rodriguez; Christian Röver; T. L. Sidery; R. J. E. Smith; Marc van der Sluys; Alberto Vecchio; W. D. Vousden; L. Wade

The Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo gravitational-wave (GW) detectors will begin operation in the coming years, with compact binary coalescence events a likely source for the first detections. The gravitational waveforms emitted directly encode information about the sources, including the masses and spins of the compact objects. Recovering the physical parameters of the sources from the GW observations is a key analysis task. This work describes the LALInference software library for Bayesian parameter estimation of compact binary signals, which builds on several previous methods to provide a well-tested toolkit which has already been used for several studies. We show that our implementation is able to correctly recover the parameters of compact binary signals from simulated data from the advanced GW detectors. We demonstrate this with a detailed comparison on three compact binary systems: a binary neutron star, a neutron star–black hole binary and a binary black hole, where we show a cross comparison of results obtained using three independent sampling algorithms. These systems were analyzed with nonspinning, aligned spin and generic spin configurations respectively, showing that consistent results can be obtained even with the full 15-dimensional parameter space of the generic spin configurations. We also demonstrate statistically that the Bayesian credible intervals we recover correspond to frequentist confidence intervals under correct prior assumptions by analyzing a set of 100 signals drawn from the prior. We discuss the computational cost of these algorithms, and describe the general and problem-specific sampling techniques we have used to improve the efficiency of sampling the compact binary coalescence parameter space.


Physical Review D | 2015

Detecting beyond-Einstein polarizations of continuous gravitational waves

M. Isi; Alan J. Weinstein; Carver A. Mead; M. Pitkin

The direct detection of gravitational waves with the next-generation detectors, like Advanced LIGO, provides the opportunity to measure deviations from the predictions of general relativity. One such departure would be the existence of alternative polarizations. To measure these, we study a single detector measurement of a continuous gravitational wave from a triaxial pulsar source. We develop methods to detect signals of any polarization content and distinguish between them in a model-independent way. We present LIGO Science Run 5 sensitivity estimates for 115 pulsars.


Physical Review D | 2017

Probing dynamical gravity with the polarization of continuous gravitational waves

M. Isi; M. Pitkin; Alan J. Weinstein

The direct detection of gravitational waves provides the opportunity to measure fundamental aspects of gravity which have never been directly probed before, including the polarization of gravitational waves. In the context of searches for continuous waves from known pulsars, we present novel methods to detect signals of any polarization content, measure the modes present and place upper limits on the amplitude of nontensorial components. This will allow us to obtain new model-independent, dynamical constraints on deviations from general relativity. We test this framework on multiple potential sources using simulated data from three advanced-era detectors at design sensitivity. We find that signals of any polarization will become detectable and distinguishable for characteristic strains h ≳ 3×10^(−27)√1  yr/T, for an observation time T. We also find that our ability to detect nontensorial components depends only on the power present in those modes, irrespective of the strength of the tensorial strain.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Prospects of observing continuous gravitational waves from known pulsars

M. Pitkin

Several searches for gravitational waves from a selection of known pulsars have been performed with data from the science runs of the LIGO gravitational wave detectors. So far these have lead to no detection, but upper limits on the gravitational wave amplitudes have been set. Here we study our intrinsic ability to detect, and estimate the gravitational wave amplitude for non-accreting pulsars. Using spin-down limits on emission as a guide we examine amplitudes that would be required to observe known pulsars with future detectors (Advanced LIGO, Advanced Virgo and the Einstein Telescope), assuming that they are triaxial stars emitting at precisely twice the known rotation frequency. Maximum allowed amplitudes depend on the stars’ equation of state (e.g. a normal neutron star, a quark star, a hybrid star) and the theoretical mass quadrupoles that they can sustain. We study what range of quadrupoles, and therefore EoS, would be consistent with being able to detect these sources. For globular cluster pulsars, with spin-downs masked by accelerations within the cluster, we examine what spin-down values gravitational wave observations would be able to set. For all pulsars we also alternatively examine what internal magnetic fields they would need to sustain observable ellipticities.

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G. Woan

University of Glasgow

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B. Barr

University of Glasgow

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A. Grant

University of Glasgow

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J. Veitch

University of Birmingham

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M. Hendry

University of Glasgow

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