S. Vinciguerra
University of Birmingham
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Featured researches published by S. Vinciguerra.
Advances in Space Research | 2018
G. Stratta; R. Ciolfi; L. Amati; E. Bozzo; G. Ghirlanda; E. Maiorano; L. Nicastro; A. Rossi; S. Vinciguerra; F. Frontera; Diego Gotz; C. Guidorzi; P. T. O’Brien; J. P. Osborne; Nial R. Tanvir; M. Branchesi; E. Brocato; M.G. Dainotti; M. De Pasquale; A. Grado; J. Greiner; F. Longo; U. Maio; D. Mereghetti; R. P. Mignani; S. Piranomonte; L. Rezzolla; R. Salvaterra; Rhaana L. C. Starling; R. Willingale
Abstract The recent discovery of the electromagnetic counterpart of the gravitational wave source GW170817, has demonstrated the huge informative power of multi-messenger observations. During the next decade the nascent field of multi-messenger astronomy will mature significantly. Around 2030 and beyond, third generation ground-based gravitational wave detectors will be roughly ten times more sensitive than the current ones. At the same time, neutrino detectors currently upgrading to multi km 3 telescopes, will include a 10 km 3 facility in the Southern hemisphere. In this review, we describe the most promising sources of high frequency gravitational waves and neutrinos that will be detected in the next two decades. In this context, we show the important role of the Transient High Energy Sky and Early Universe Surveyor (THESEUS), a mission concept accepted by ESA for phase A study and proposed by a large international collaboration in response to the call for the Cosmic Vision Programme M5 missions. THESEUS aims at providing a substantial advancement in early Universe science as well as in multi–messenger and time–domain astrophysics, operating in strong synergy with future gravitational wave and neutrino detectors as well as major ground- and space-based telescopes. This review is an extension of the THESEUS white paper (Amati et al., 2017), also in light of the discovery of GW170817/GRB170817A that was announced on October 16th, 2017.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017
S. Vinciguerra; J. Veitch; Ilya Mandel
Parameter estimation on gravitational wave signals from compact binary coalescence (CBC) requires the evaluation of computationally intensive waveform models, typically the bottleneck in the analysis. This cost will increase further as low frequency sensitivity in later second and third generation detectors motivates the use of longer waveforms. We describe a method for accelerating parameter estimation by exploiting the chirping behaviour of the signals to sample the waveform sparsely for portions where the full frequency resolution is not required. We demonstrate that the method can reproduce the original results with a waveform mismatch of
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017
S. Vinciguerra; M. Drago; G. A. Prodi; S. Klimenko; C. Lazzaro; V. Necula; F. Salemi; V. Tiwari; M. C. Tringali; G. Vedovato
\leq 5\times 10^{-7}
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
S. Vinciguerra; M. Branchesi; Riccardo Ciolfi; Ilya Mandel; Coenraad J. Neijssel; G. Stratta
, but with a waveform generation cost up to
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
G. Stratta; L. Amati; R. Ciolfi; S. Vinciguerra
\sim 50