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Featured researches published by S. Nissanke.


Nature | 2017

A mildly relativistic wide-angle outflow in the neutron-star merger event GW170817

K. Mooley; Ehud Nakar; Kenta Hotokezaka; Gregg Hallinan; A. Corsi; Dale A. Frail; S. Nissanke; Keith W. Bannister; L. P. Singer

GW170817 was the first gravitational-wave detection of a binary neutron-star merger. It was accompanied by radiation across the electromagnetic spectrum and localized to the galaxy NGC 4993 at a distance of 40 megaparsecs. It has been proposed that the observed γ-ray, X-ray and radio emission is due to an ultra-relativistic jet being launched during the merger (and successfully breaking out of the surrounding material), directed away from our line of sight (off-axis). The presence of such a jet is predicted from models that posit neutron-star mergers as the drivers of short hard-γ-ray bursts. Here we report that the radio light curve of GW170817 has no direct signature of the afterglow of an off-axis jet. Although we cannot completely rule out the existence of a jet directed away from the line of sight, the observed γ-ray emission could not have originated from such a jet. Instead, the radio data require the existence of a mildly relativistic wide-angle outflow moving towards us. This outflow could be the high-velocity tail of the neutron-rich material that was ejected dynamically during the merger, or a cocoon of material that breaks out when a jet launched during the merger transfers its energy to the dynamical ejecta. Because the cocoon model explains the radio light curve of GW170817, as well as the γ-ray and X-ray emission (and possibly also the ultraviolet and optical emission), it is the model that is most consistent with the observational data. Cocoons may be a ubiquitous phenomenon produced in neutron-star mergers, giving rise to a hitherto unidentified population of radio, ultraviolet, X-ray and γ-ray transients in the local Universe.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Galaxy Strategy for Ligo-Virgo Gravitational Wave Counterpart Searches

Neil Gehrels; John K. Cannizzo; J. B. Kanner; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. Nissanke; L. P. Singer

In this work we continue a line of inquiry begun in Kanner et al. which detailed a strategy for utilizing telescopes with narrow fields of view, such as the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT), to localize gravity wave (GW) triggers from LIGO/Virgo. If one considers the brightest galaxies that produce ~50% of the light, then the number of galaxies inside typical GW error boxes will be several tens. We have found that this result applies both in the early years of Advanced LIGO when the range is small and the error boxes large, and in the later years when the error boxes will be small and the range large. This strategy has the beneficial property of reducing the number of telescope pointings by a factor 10 to 100 compared with tiling the entire error box. Additional galaxy count reduction will come from a GW rapid distance estimate which will restrict the radial slice in search volume. Combining the bright galaxy strategy with a convolution based on anticipated GW localizations, we find that the searches can be restricted to about 18±5 galaxies for 2015, about 23±4 for 2017, and about 11±2 for 2020. This assumes a distance localization at or near the putative NS-NS merger range for each target year, and these totals are integrated out to the range. Integrating out to the horizon would roughly double the totals. For nearer localizations the totals would decrease. The galaxy strategy we present in this work will enable numerous sensitive optical and X-ray telescopes with small fields of view to participate meaningfully in searches wherein the prospects for rapidly fading afterglow place a premium on a fast response time.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Going the Distance: Mapping Host Galaxies of LIGO and Virgo Sources in Three Dimensions Using Local Cosmography and Targeted Follow-up

L. P. Singer; Hsin-Yu Chen; Daniel E. Holz; W. M. Farr; Lawrence Price; V. Raymond; S. Bradley Cenko; Neil Gehrels; John K. Cannizzo; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. Nissanke; M. W. Coughlin; B. Farr; A. L. Urban; Salvatore Vitale; J. Veitch; P. B. Graff; C. P. L. Berry; S. R. P. Mohapatra; Ilya Mandel

The Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) discovered gravitational waves (GWs) from a binary black hole merger in 2015 September and may soon observe signals from neutron star mergers. There is considerable interest in searching for their faint and rapidly fading electromagnetic (EM) counterparts, though GW position uncertainties are as coarse as hundreds of square degrees. Because LIGOs sensitivity to binary neutron stars is limited to the local universe, the area on the sky that must be searched could be reduced by weighting positions by mass, luminosity, or star formation in nearby galaxies. Since GW observations provide information about luminosity distance, combining the reconstructed volume with positions and redshifts of galaxies could reduce the area even more dramatically. A key missing ingredient has been a rapid GW parameter estimation algorithm that reconstructs the full distribution of sky location and distance. We demonstrate the first such algorithm, which takes under a minute, fast enough to enable immediate EM follow-up. By combining the three-dimensional posterior with a galaxy catalog, we can reduce the number of galaxies that could conceivably host the event by a factor of 1.4, the total exposure time for the Swift X-ray Telescope by a factor of 2, the total exposure time for a synoptic optical survey by a factor of 2, and the total exposure time for a narrow-field optical telescope by a factor of 3. This encourages us to suggest a new role for small field of view optical instruments in performing targeted searches of the most massive galaxies within the reconstructed volumes.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

RADIO COUNTERPARTS OF COMPACT BINARY MERGERS DETECTABLE IN GRAVITATIONAL WAVES: A SIMULATION FOR AN OPTIMIZED SURVEY

Kenta Hotokezaka; S. Nissanke; Gregg Hallinan; T. J. W. Lazio; Ehud Nakar; Tsvi Piran

Mergers of binary neutron stars and black hole–neutron star binaries produce gravitational-wave (GW) emission and outflows with significant kinetic energies. These outflows result in radio emissions through synchrotron radiation. We explore the detectability of these synchrotron-generated radio signals by follow-up observations of GW merger events lacking a detection of electromagnetic counterparts in other wavelengths. We model radio light curves arising from (i) sub-relativistic merger ejecta and (ii) ultra-relativistic jets. The former produce radio remnants on timescales of a few years and the latter produce γ-ray bursts in the direction of the jet and orphan-radio afterglows extending over wider angles on timescales of weeks. Based on the derived light curves, we suggest an optimized survey at 1.4 GHz with five epochs separated by a logarithmic time interval. We estimate the detectability of the radio counterparts of simulated GW-merger events to be detected by advanced LIGO and Virgo by current and future radio facilities. The detectable distances for these GW merger events could be as high as 1 Gpc. Around 20%–60% of the long-lasting radio remnants will be detectable in the case of the moderate kinetic energy of 3 · 10^(50) erg and a circum-merger density of 0.1 cm^(-3) or larger, while 5%–20% of the orphan-radio afterglows with kinetic energy of 1048 erg will be detectable. The detection likelihood increases if one focuses on the well-localizable GW events. We discuss the background noise due to radio fluxes of host galaxies and false positives arising from extragalactic radio transients and variable active galactic nuclei, and we show that the quiet radio transient sky is of great advantage when searching for the radio counterparts.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Erratum: Upper Limits on the Stochastic Gravitational-Wave Background from Advanced LIGO's First Observing Run [Phys. Rev. Lett. 118, 121101 (2017)]

B. Abbott; S. Bloemen; S. Ghosh; P. Groot; G. Nelemans; S. Nissanke; Y. Setyawati

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.121101.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2016

Supplement: “Going the Distance: Mapping Host Galaxies of LIGO and Virgo Sources in Three Dimensions Using Local Cosmography and Targeted Follow-up” (2016, ApJL, 829, L15)

L. P. Singer; Hsin-Yu Chen; Daniel E. Holz; W. M. Farr; Lawrence Price; V. Raymond; S. Bradley Cenko; Neil Gehrels; John K. Cannizzo; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. Nissanke; M. W. Coughlin; B. Farr; A. L. Urban; Salvatore Vitale; J. Veitch; P. B. Graff; C. P. L. Berry; S. R. P. Mohapatra; Ilya Mandel

This is a supplement to the Letter of Singer et al., in which we demonstrated a rapid algorithm for obtaining joint 3D estimates of sky location and luminosity distance from observations of binary neutron star mergers with Advanced LIGO and Virgo. We argued that combining the reconstructed volumes with positions and redshifts of possible host galaxies can provide large-aperture but small field of view instruments with a manageable list of targets to search for optical or infrared emission. In this Supplement, we document the new HEALPix-based file format for 3D localizations of gravitational-wave transients. We include Python sample code to show the reader how to perform simple manipulations of the 3D sky maps and extract ranked lists of likely host galaxies. Finally, we include mathematical details of the rapid volume reconstruction algorithm.


International Journal of Modern Physics A | 2017

Status of the Advanced Virgo gravitational wave detector

F. Acernese; S. Bloemen; P. Canizares; S. Ghosh; P. Groot; G. Nelemans; D. Nichols; S. Nissanke; P. Schmidt

Advanced Virgo is the French–Italian second generation laser gravitational wave detector, successor of the Initial Virgo. This new interferometer keeps only the infrastructure of its predecessor and aims to be ten times more sensitive, with its first science run planned for 2017. This article gives an overview of the Advanced Virgo design and the technical choices behind it. Finally, the up-to-date progresses and the planned upgrade for the following years are detailed.


Archive | 2017

LIGO/Virgo G211117 / GW151226: LOFAR follow-up

A. Rowlinson; J. Broderick; P.G. Jonker; R.P. Fender; R. A. M. J. Wijers; B. W. Stappers; S. Ghosh; S. Nissanke; A. Shulevski

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L. P. Singer

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Mansi M. Kasliwal

California Institute of Technology

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Neil Gehrels

Goddard Space Flight Center

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S. Ghosh

Washington State University

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A. L. Urban

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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B. Farr

University of Chicago

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Gregg Hallinan

California Institute of Technology

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