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Featured researches published by Q. Chu.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Capturing the electromagnetic counterparts of binary neutron star mergers through low-latency gravitational wave triggers

Q. Chu; E. J. Howell; A. Rowlinson; He Gao; Bing Zhang; S. J. Tingay; M. Boer; L. Wen

We investigate the prospects for joint low-latency gravitational wave (GW) detection and prompt electromagnetic (EM) follow-up observations of coalescing binary neutron stars (BNSs). For BNS mergers associated with short duration gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs), we for the first time evaluate the feasibility of rapid EM follow-ups to capture the prompt emission, early engine activity or reveal any potential by-products such as magnetars or fast radio bursts. To achieve our goal, we first simulate a population of coalescing BNSs using realistic distributions of source parameters and estimate the detectability and localisation efficiency at different times before merger. We then use a selection of facilities with GW follow-up agreements in place, from low-frequency radio to high energy γ-ray to assess the prospects of prompt follow-up. We quantify our assessment using observational SGRB flux data extrapolated to be within the horizon distances of the advanced GW interferometric detectors LIGO and Virgo and to the prompt phase immediately following the binary merger. Our results illustrate that while challenging, breakthrough multi-messenger science is possible with EM followup facilities with fast responses and wide fields-of-view. We demonstrate that the opportunity to catch the prompt stage (< 5s) of SGRBs, can be enhanced by speeding up the detection pipelines of both GW observatories and EM follow-up facilities. We further show that the addition of an Australian instrument to the optimal detector network could possibly improve the angular resolution by a factor of two and thereby contribute significantly to GW-EM multi-messenger astronomy.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

Host galaxy identification for binary black hole mergers with long baseline gravitational wave detectors

E. J. Howell; M. Chan; Q. Chu; D. H. Jones; I. S. Heng; H. M. Lee; David Blair; J. Degallaix; T. Regimbau; H. Miao; C. Zhao; M. Hendry; David Coward; C. Messenger; L. Ju; Z. H. Zhu

The detection of black hole binary coalescence events by Advanced LIGO allows the science benefits of future detectors to be evaluated. In this paper, we report the science benefits of one or two 8 km arm length detectors based on the doubling of key parameters in an Advanced LIGO-type detector, combined with realizable enhancements. It is shown that the total detection rate for sources similar to those already detected would increase to ∼ 103–105 per year. Within 0.4 Gpc, we find that around 10 of these events would be localizable to within ∼10−1 deg2. This is sufficient to make unique associations or to rule out a direct association with the brightest galaxies in optical surveys (at r-band magnitudes of 17 or above) or for deeper limits (down to r-band magnitudes of 20) yield statistically significant associations. The combination of angular resolution and event rate would benefit precision testing of formation models, cosmic evolution, and cosmological studies.


arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2016

Fast response electromagnetic follow-ups from low latency GW triggers

E. J. Howell; Q. Chu; A. Rowlinson; He Gao; Bin-Bin Zhang; S. J. Tingay; M. Boer; L. Wen

We investigate joint low-latency gravitational wave (GW) detection and prompt electromagnetic (EM) follow-up observations of coalescing binary neutron stars (BNSs). Assuming that BNS mergers are associated with short duration gamma ray bursts (SGRBs), we evaluate if rapid EM follow-ups can capture the prompt emission, early engine activity or reveal any potential by-products such as magnetars or fast radio bursts. To examine the expected performance of extreme low-latency search pipelines, we simulate a population of coalescing BNSs and use these to estimate the detectability and localisation efficiency at different times before merger. Using observational SGRB flux data corrected to the range of the advanced GW interferometric detectors, we determine what EM observations could be achieved from low-frequency radio up to high energy γ-ray. We show that while challenging, breakthrough multi-messenger science is possible through low latency pipelines.

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E. J. Howell

University of Western Australia

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L. Wen

University of Western Australia

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M. Boer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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He Gao

Beijing Normal University

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A. Rowlinson

University of Amsterdam

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C. Zhao

University of Western Australia

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D. H. Jones

University of Newcastle

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David Blair

University of Western Australia

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David Coward

University of Western Australia

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