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Featured researches published by R. Prix.


Physical Review D | 2004

Variational description of multifluid hydrodynamics: Uncharged fluids

R. Prix

of the two-fluid model via a translation to the ‘‘orthodox’’ framework of superfluidity, which is based on a rather awkward choice of variables. Our two-fluid model for superfluid neutron star matter allows for dissipation via mutual friction and also ‘‘transfusion’’ via b reactions between the neutron fluid and the protonelectron fluid.


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.


Science | 2010

Pulsar discovery by global volunteer computing

B. Knispel; B. Allen; J. M. Cordes; J. S. Deneva; David P. Anderson; C. Aulbert; N. D. R. Bhat; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; D. J. Champion; S. Chatterjee; F. Crawford; Paul Demorest; H. Fehrmann; P. C. C. Freire; M. E. Gonzalez; D. Hammer; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; L. Kasian; Victoria M. Kaspi; M. Kramer; P. Lazarus; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; A. G. Lyne; B. Machenschalk; M. A. McLaughlin

Einstein@Home, a distributed computing project, discovered a rare, isolated pulsar with a low magnetic field. Einstein@Home aggregates the computer power of hundreds of thousands of volunteers from 192 countries to mine large data sets. It has now found a 40.8-hertz isolated pulsar in radio survey data from the Arecibo Observatory taken in February 2007. Additional timing observations indicate that this pulsar is likely a disrupted recycled pulsar. PSR J2007+2722’s pulse profile is remarkably wide with emission over almost the entire spin period; the pulsar likely has closely aligned magnetic and spin axes. The massive computing power provided by volunteers should enable many more such discoveries.


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 Letters | 2003

Are pulsar glitches triggered by a superfluid two-stream instability?

Nils Andersson; G. L. Comer; R. Prix

Mature neutron stars are expected to have several superfluid components. Strong evidence for this is provided by the glitches that have been observed in dozens of pulsars. We describe a superfluid analog of the two-stream instability that is well known in plasma physics and provide arguments that this instability is likely to be relevant for neutron stars. This is a new physical mechanism which may play a key role in explaining the glitch mechanism and which could also prove to be relevant in laboratory experiments on various superfluid systems.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

Arecibo PALFA survey and Einstein@Home: Binary pulsar discovery by volunteer computing

B. Knispel; P. Lazarus; B. Allen; David P. Anderson; C. Aulbert; N. D. R. Bhat; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; G. Desvignes; H. Fehrmann; P. C. C. Freire; D. Hammer; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; V. M. Kaspi; M. Kramer; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; A. G. Lyne; B. Machenschalk; M. A. McLaughlin; C. Messenger; David J. Nice; M. A. Papa

We report the discovery of the 20.7 ms binary pulsar J1952+2630, made using the distributed computing project Einstein@Home in Pulsar ALFA survey observations with the Arecibo telescope. Follow-up observations with the Arecibo telescope confirm the binary nature of the system. We obtain a circular orbital solution with an orbital


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.


Physical Review D | 2014

Search for continuous gravitational waves: improving robustness versus instrumental artifacts

D. Keitel; R. Prix; M. A. Papa; P. Leaci; Maham Siddiqi

The standard multidetector F-statistic for continuous gravitational waves is susceptible to false alarms from instrumental artifacts, for example monochromatic sinusoidal disturbances (“lines”). This vulnerability to line artifacts arises because the F-statistic compares the signal hypothesis to a Gaussian-noise hypothesis, and hence is triggered by anything that resembles the signal hypothesis more than Gaussian noise. Various ad-hoc veto methods to deal with such line artifacts have been proposed and used in the past. Here we develop a Bayesian framework that includes an explicit alternative hypothesis to model disturbed data. We introduce a simple line model that defines lines as signal candidates appearing only in one detector. This allows us to explicitly compute the odds between the signal hypothesis and an extended noise hypothesis, resulting in a new detection statistic that is more robust to instrumental artifacts. We present and discuss results from Monte-Carlo tests on both simulated data and on detector data from the fifth LIGO science run. We find that the line-robust statistic retains the detection power of the standard F-statistic in Gaussian noise. In the presence of line artifacts it is more sensitive, even compared to the popular F-statistic consistency veto, over which it improves by as much as a factor of two in detectable signal strength.


Physical Review D | 2012

Search for Continuous Gravitational Waves: Optimal StackSlide method at fixed computing cost

R. Prix; M. Shaltev

a bounded regime with a finite optimal observation time. Our analysis of the sensitivity scaling reveals that both the fine- and coarse-grid mismatches contribute equally to the average StackSlide mismatch, an effect that had been overlooked in previous studies. We discuss various practical examples for the application of this optimization framework, illustrating the potential gains in sensitivity compared to previous searches.


Physical Review D | 2011

Search method for long-duration gravitational-wave transients from neutron stars

R. Prix; S. Giampanis; C. Messenger

We introduce a search method for a new class of gravitational-wave signals, namely, long-duration Oðhours-weeksÞ transients from spinning neutron stars. We discuss the astrophysical motivation from glitch relaxation models and we derive a rough estimate for the maximal expected signal strength based on the superfluid excess rotational energy. The transient signal model considered here extends the traditional class of infinite-duration continuous-wave signals by a finite start-time and duration. We derive a multidetector Bayes factor for these signals in Gaussian noise using F-statistic amplitude priors, which simplifies the detection statistic and allows for an efficient implementation. We consider both a fully coherent statistic, which is computationally limited to directed searches for known pulsars, and a cheaper semicoherent variant, suitable for wide parameter-space searches for transients from unknown neutron stars. We have tested our method by Monte-Carlo simulation, and we find that it outperforms orthodox maximum-likelihood approaches both in sensitivity and in parameter-estimation quality.

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D. I. Jones

University of Southampton

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