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Featured researches published by N. Fotopoulos.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

TOWARD EARLY-WARNING DETECTION OF GRAVITATIONAL WAVES FROM COMPACT BINARY COALESCENCE

K. C. Cannon; Romain Cariou; Adrian Chapman; Mireia Crispin-Ortuzar; N. Fotopoulos; M. Frei; Chad Hanna; E. Kara; D. G. Keppel; Laura E. Liao; S. Privitera; A. C. Searle; L. P. Singer; Alan J. Weinstein

Rapid detection of compact binary coalescence (CBC) with a network of advanced gravitational-wave detectors will offer a unique opportunity for multi-messenger astronomy. Prompt detection alerts for the astronomical community might make it possible to observe the onset of electromagnetic emission from CBC. We demonstrate a computationally practical filtering strategy that could produce early-warning triggers before gravitational radiation from the final merger has arrived at the detectors.


Physical Review D | 2014

Improving the sensitivity of a search for coalescing binary black holes with nonprecessing spins in gravitational wave data

S. Privitera; S. R P Mohapatra; P. Ajith; K. C. Cannon; N. Fotopoulos; M. Frei; Chad Hanna; Alan J. Weinstein; James Whelan

We demonstrate for the first time a search pipeline with improved sensitivity to gravitational waves from coalescing binary black holes with spins aligned to the orbital angular momentum by the inclusion of spin effects in the search templates. We study the pipeline recovery of simulated gravitational wave signals from aligned-spin binary black holes added to real detector noise, comparing the pipeline performance with aligned-spin filter templates to the same pipeline with nonspinning filter templates. Our results exploit a three-parameter phenomenological waveform family that models the full inspiral-merger-ringdown coalescence and treats the effect of aligned spins with a single effective spin parameter χ. We construct template banks from these waveforms by a stochastic placement method and use these banks as filters in the recently developed gstlal search pipeline. We measure the observable volume of the analysis pipeline for binary black hole signals with M_(total) and χ∈[0,0.85]. We find an increase in observable volume of up to 45% for systems with 0.2≤χ≤0.85 with almost no loss of sensitivity to signals with 0≤χ≤0.2. We also show that the use of spinning templates in the search pipeline provides for more accurate recovery of the binary mass parameters as well as an estimate of the effective spin parameter. We demonstrate this analysis on 25.9 days of data obtained from the Hanford and Livingston detectors in LIGO’s fifth observation run.


Physical Review D | 2014

Effectual template bank for the detection of gravitational waves from inspiralling compact binaries with generic spins

P. Ajith; N. Fotopoulos; S. Privitera; A. Neunzert; N. Mazumder; A. J. Weinstein

We report the construction of a three-dimensional template bank for the search for gravitational waves from inspiralling binaries consisting of spinning compact objects. The parameter space consists of two dimensions describing the mass parameters and one “reduced-spin” parameter, which describes the secular (nonprecessing) spin effects in the waveform. The template placement is based on an efficient stochastic algorithm and makes use of the semianalytical computation of a metric in the parameter space. We demonstrate that for “low-mass” (m_1+m_2≲12M⊙) binaries, this template bank achieves effective fitting factors ∼0.92– 0.99 towards signals from generic spinning binaries in the advanced detector era over the entire parameter space of interest (including binary neutron stars, binary black holes, and black-hole neutron-star binaries). This provides a powerful and viable method for searching for gravitational waves from generic spinning low-mass compact binaries. Under the assumption that spin magnitudes of black holes (neutron stars) are uniformly distributed between 0–0.98 [0–0.4] and spin angles are isotropically distributed, the expected improvement in the average detection volume (at a fixed signal-to-noise-ratio threshold) of a search using this reduced-spin bank is ∼20%–52%, as compared to a search using a nonspinning bank.


Physical Review D | 2013

Outlook for detection of GW inspirals by GRB-triggered searches in the advanced detector era

A. Dietz; N. Fotopoulos; L. P. Singer; Curt Cutler

Short, hard gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are believed to originate from the coalescence of two neutron stars (NSs) or a NS and a black hole (BH). If this scenario is correct, then short GRBs will be accompanied by the emission of strong gravitational waves (GWs), detectable by GW observatories such as LIGO, Virgo, KAGRA, and LIGO-India. As compared with blind, all-sky, all-time GW searches, externally triggered searches for GW counterparts to short GRBs have the advantages of both significantly reduced detection threshold due to known time and sky location and enhanced GW amplitude because of face-on orientation. Based on the distribution of signal-to-noise ratios in candidate compact binary coalescence events in the most recent joint LIGO-Virgo data, our analytic estimates, and our Monte Carlo simulations, we find an effective sensitive volume for GRB-triggered searches that is ≈2  times greater than for an all-sky, all-time search. For NS-NS systems, a jet angle θ_j=20°, a gamma-ray satellite field of view of 10% of the sky, and priors with generally precessing spin, this doubles the number of NS-NS short-GRB and NS-BH short-GRB associations, to ∼3–4% of all detections of NS-NSs and NS-BHs. We also investigate the power of tests for statistical excesses in lists of subthreshold events, and show that these are unlikely to reveal a subthreshold population until finding GW associations to short GRBs is already routine. Finally, we provide useful formulas for calculating the prior distribution of GW amplitudes from a compact binary coalescence, for a given GW detector network and given sky location.


Physical Review D | 2012

Likelihood-ratio ranking of gravitational-wave candidates in a non-Gaussian background.

R. Biswas; P. R. Brady; Jordi Burguet-Castell; K. C. Cannon; Jessica Clayton; Alexander Dietz; N. Fotopoulos; L. M. Goggin; D. G. Keppel; C. Pankow; Lawrence Price; R. Vaulin

We describe a general approach to detection of transient gravitational-wave signals in the presence of non-Gaussian background noise. We prove that under quite general conditions, the ratio of the likelihood of observed data to contain a signal to the likelihood of it being a noise fluctuation provides optimal ranking for the candidate events found in an experiment. The likelihood-ratio ranking allows us to combine different kinds of data into a single analysis. We apply the general framework to the problem of unifying the results of independent experiments and the problem of accounting for non-Gaussian artifacts in the searches for gravitational waves from compact binary coalescence in LIGO data. We show analytically and confirm through simulations that in both cases applying the likelihood-ratio ranking results in an improved analysis.


Physical Review D | 2012

Detecting transient gravitational waves in non-Gaussian noise with partially redundant analysis methods

R. Biswas; P. R. Brady; Jordi Burguet-Castell; K. C. Cannon; Jessica Clayton; Alexander Dietz; N. Fotopoulos; L. M. Goggin; D. G. Keppel; C. Pankow; Lawrence Price; R. Vaulin

There is a broad class of astrophysical sources that produce detectable, transient, gravitational waves. Some searches for transient gravitational waves are tailored to known features of these sources. Other searches make few assumptions about the sources. Typically events are observable with multiple search techniques. This work describes how to combine the results of searches that are not independent, treating each search as a classifier for a given event. This will be shown to improve the overall sensitivity to gravitational-wave events while directly addressing the problem of consistent interpretation of multiple trials.


Archive | 2015

CAPACITIVE MEASUREMENT PROCESSING FOR MODE CHANGES

Prakriti Chintalapoodi; N. Fotopoulos; D. G. Keppel


APS | 2013

Searching for gravitational waves from binary coalescence

R. Vaulin; S. Babak; R. Biswas; P. R. Brady; D. A. Brown; K. Cannon; C. D. Capano; T. Cokelaer; Jolien D. E. Creighton; T. Dent; A. Dietz; S. Fairhurst; N. Fotopoulos; G. González; C. Hanna; I. W. Harry; G. H. Jones; D. G. Keppel; D. J A McKechan; L. Pekowsky; S. Privitera; C. Robinson; Andrea C. Rodriguez; B. S. Sathyaprakash; A. S. Sengupta; M. Vallisneri; A. J. Weinstein


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Practical stochastic template placement for spinning gravitational-wave inspiral searches

N. Fotopoulos; S. Privitera; M. Frei


Archive | 2011

Abstract Submitted for the APR11 Meeting of The American Physical Society

N. Fotopoulos; K. C. Cannon; C. Hanna; D. G. Keppel; S. Privitera; L. P. Singer

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L. P. Singer

Goddard Space Flight Center

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M. Frei

University of Texas at Austin

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P. R. Brady

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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R. Biswas

University of Texas at Brownsville

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R. Vaulin

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Chad Hanna

Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

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P. Ajith

Tata Institute of Fundamental Research

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