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Dive into the research topics where Zachariah B. Etienne is active.

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Featured researches published by Zachariah B. Etienne.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2009

Testing gravitational-wave searches with numerical relativity waveforms: results from the first Numerical INJection Analysis (NINJA) project

B. E. Aylott; John G. Baker; William D. Boggs; Michael Boyle; P. R. Brady; D. A. Brown; Bernd Brügmann; Luisa T. Buchman; A. Buonanno; L. Cadonati; Jordan Camp; Manuela Campanelli; Joan M. Centrella; S. Chatterji; N. Christensen; Tony Chu; Peter Diener; Nils Dorband; Zachariah B. Etienne; Joshua A. Faber; S. Fairhurst; B. Farr; Sebastian Fischetti; G. M. Guidi; L. M. Goggin; Mark Hannam; Frank Herrmann; Ian Hinder; S. Husa; Vicky Kalogera

The Numerical INJection Analysis (NINJA) project is a collaborative effort between members of the numerical relativity and gravitational-wave data analysis communities. The purpose of NINJA is to study the sensitivity of existing gravitational-wave search algorithms using numerically generated waveforms and to foster closer collaboration between the numerical relativity and data analysis communities. We describe the results of the first NINJA analysis which focused on gravitational waveforms from binary black hole coalescence. Ten numerical relativity groups contributed numerical data which were used to generate a set of gravitational-wave signals. These signals were injected into a simulated data set, designed to mimic the response of the initial LIGO and Virgo gravitational-wave detectors. Nine groups analysed this data using search and parameter-estimation pipelines. Matched filter algorithms, un-modelled-burst searches and Bayesian parameter estimation and model-selection algorithms were applied to the data. We report the efficiency of these search methods in detecting the numerical waveforms and measuring their parameters. We describe preliminary comparisons between the different search methods and suggest improvements for future NINJA analyses.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2013

Error-analysis and comparison to analytical models of numerical waveforms produced by the NRAR Collaboration

Ian Hinder; A. Buonanno; Michael Boyle; Zachariah B. Etienne; James Healy; Nathan K. Johnson-McDaniel; Alessandro Nagar; Hiroyuki Nakano; Y. Pan; Harald P. Pfeiffer; Michael Pürrer; Christian Reisswig; Mark A. Scheel; Ulrich Sperhake; Bela Szilagyi; Wolfgang Tichy; Barry Wardell; Anıl Zenginoğlu; Daniela Alic; Sebastiano Bernuzzi; Tanja Bode; Bernd Brügmann; Luisa T. Buchman; Manuela Campanelli; Tony Chu; Thibault Damour; Jason D Grigsby; Mark Hannam; Roland Haas; Daniel A. Hemberger

The Numerical–Relativity–Analytical–Relativity (NRAR) collaboration is a joint effort between members of the numerical relativity, analytical relativity and gravitational-wave data analysis communities. The goal of the NRAR collaboration is to produce numerical-relativity simulations of compact binaries and use them to develop accurate analytical templates for the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration to use in detecting gravitational-wave signals and extracting astrophysical information from them. We describe the results of the first stage of the NRAR project, which focused on producing an initial set of numerical waveforms from binary black holes with moderate mass ratios and spins, as well as one non-spinning binary configuration which has a mass ratio of 10. All of the numerical waveforms are analysed in a uniform and consistent manner, with numerical errors evaluated using an analysis code created by members of the NRAR collaboration. We compare previously-calibrated, non-precessing analytical waveforms, notably the effective-one-body (EOB) and phenomenological template families, to the newly-produced numerical waveforms. We find that when the binarys total mass is ~100–200M⊙, current EOB and phenomenological models of spinning, non-precessing binary waveforms have overlaps above 99% (for advanced LIGO) with all of the non-precessing-binary numerical waveforms with mass ratios ≤4, when maximizing over binary parameters. This implies that the loss of event rate due to modelling error is below 3%. Moreover, the non-spinning EOB waveforms previously calibrated to five non-spinning waveforms with mass ratio smaller than 6 have overlaps above 99.7% with the numerical waveform with a mass ratio of 10, without even maximizing on the binary parameters.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2012

The NINJA-2 catalog of hybrid post-Newtonian/numerical-relativity waveforms for non-precessing black-hole binaries

P. Ajith; Michael Boyle; D. A. Brown; Bernd Brügmann; Luisa T. Buchman; L. Cadonati; Manuela Campanelli; Tony Chu; Zachariah B. Etienne; S. Fairhurst; Mark Hannam; James Healy; Ian Hinder; S. Husa; Lawrence E. Kidder; Badri Krishnan; Pablo Laguna; Yuk Tung Liu; L. T. London; Carlos O. Lousto; Geoffrey Lovelace; Ilana MacDonald; Pedro Marronetti; S. R. P. Mohapatra; Philipp Mösta; Doreen Müller; Bruno C. Mundim; Hiroyuki Nakano; F. Ohme; Vasileios Paschalidis

The numerical injection analysis (NINJA) project is a collaborative effort between members of the numerical-relativity and gravitational wave data-analysis communities. The purpose of NINJA is to study the sensitivity of existing gravitational-wave search and parameter-estimation algorithms using numerically generated waveforms and to foster closer collaboration between the numerical-relativity and data-analysis communities. The first NINJA project used only a small number of injections of short numerical-relativity waveforms, which limited its ability to draw quantitative conclusions. The goal of the NINJA-2 project is to overcome these limitations with long post-Newtonian—numerical-relativity hybrid waveforms, large numbers of injections and the use of real detector data. We report on the submission requirements for the NINJA-2 project and the construction of the waveform catalog. Eight numerical-relativity groups have contributed 56 hybrid waveforms consisting of a numerical portion modeling the late inspiral, merger and ringdown stitched to a post-Newtonian portion modeling the early inspiral. We summarize the techniques used by each group in constructing their submissions. We also report on the procedures used to validate these submissions, including examination in the time and frequency domains and comparisons of waveforms from different groups against each other. These procedures have so far considered only the (l, m) = (2, 2) mode. Based on these studies, we judge that the hybrid waveforms are suitable for NINJA-2 studies. We note some of the plans for these investigations.


Physical Review D | 2010

Relativistic magnetohydrodynamics in dynamical spacetimes: A new adaptive mesh refinement implementation

Zachariah B. Etienne; Yuk Tung Liu; Stuart L. Shapiro

We have written and tested a new general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics code, capable of evolving magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) fluids in dynamical spacetimes with adaptive-mesh refinement (AMR). Our code solves the Einstein-Maxwell-MHD system of coupled equations in full 3+1 dimensions, evolving the metric via the Baumgarte-Shapiro Shibata-Nakamura formalism and the MHD and magnetic induction equations via a conservative, high-resolution shock-capturing scheme. The induction equations are recast as an evolution equation for the magnetic vector potential, which exists on a grid that is staggered with respect to the hydrodynamic and metric variables. The divergenceless constraint {nabla}{center_dot}B=0 is enforced by the curl of the vector potential. Our MHD scheme is fully compatible with AMR, so that fluids at AMR refinement boundaries maintain {nabla}{center_dot}B=0. In simulations with uniform grid spacing, our MHD scheme is numerically equivalent to a commonly used, staggered-mesh constrained-transport scheme. We present code validation test results, both in Minkowski and curved spacetimes. They include magnetized shocks, nonlinear Alfven waves, cylindrical explosions, cylindrical rotating disks, magnetized Bondi tests, and the collapse of a magnetized rotating star. Some of the more stringent tests involve black holes. We find good agreement between analytic and numerical solutions in these tests, and achieve convergence at the expected order.


Physical Review D | 2014

Accretion disks around binary black holes of unequal mass: General relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations near decoupling

Roman Gold; Vasileios Paschalidis; Zachariah B. Etienne; Stuart L. Shapiro; Harald P. Pfeiffer

We report on simulations in general relativity of magnetized disks accreting onto black hole binaries. We vary the binary mass ratio from 1:1 to 1:10 and evolve the systems when they orbit near the binary-disk decoupling radius. We compare (surface) density profiles, accretion rates (relative to a single, nonspinning black hole), variability, effective


Physical Review D | 2012

General relativistic simulations of black hole-neutron star mergers: Effects of magnetic fields

Zachariah B. Etienne; Vasileios Paschalidis; Stuart L. Shapiro

\ensuremath{\alpha}


Physical Review D | 2007

Filling the holes: Evolving excised binary black hole initial data with puncture techniques

Zachariah B. Etienne; Joshua A. Faber; Yuk Tung Liu; Stuart L. Shapiro; Thomas W. Baumgarte

-stress levels and luminosities as functions of the mass ratio. We treat the disks in two limiting regimes: rapid radiative cooling and no radiative cooling. The magnetic field lines clearly reveal jets emerging from both black hole horizons and merging into one common jet at large distances. The magnetic fields give rise to much stronger shock heating than the pure hydrodynamic flows, completely alter the disk structure, and boost accretion rates and luminosities. Accretion streams near the horizons are among the densest structures; in fact, the 1:10 no-cooling evolution results in a refilling of the cavity. The typical effective temperature in the bulk of the disk is


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2009

Status of NINJA: the Numerical INJection Analysis project

L. Cadonati; B. E. Aylott; John G. Baker; William D. Boggs; Michael Boyle; P. R. Brady; D. A. Brown; Bernd Brügmann; Luisa T. Buchman; A. Buonanno; Jordan Camp; Manuela Campanelli; Joan M. Centrella; S. Chatterji; N. Christensen; Tony Chu; Peter Diener; Nils Dorband; Zachariah B. Etienne; Joshua A. Faber; S. Fairhurst; B. Farr; Sebastian Fischetti; G. M. Guidi; L. M. Goggin; Mark Hannam; Frank Herrmann; Ian Hinder; S. Husa; Vicky Kalogera

\ensuremath{\sim}1{0}^{5}(M/1{0}^{8}{M}_{\ensuremath{\bigodot}}{)}^{\ensuremath{-}1/4}(L/{L}_{\text{edd}}{)}^{1/4}\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{K}


Physical Review D | 2006

General relativistic simulations of slowly and differentially rotating magnetized neutron stars

Zachariah B. Etienne; Yuk Tung Liu; Stuart L. Shapiro

yielding characteristic thermal frequencies


Physical Review D | 2014

Accretion disks around binary black holes of unequal mass: General relativistic MHD simulations of postdecoupling and merger

Roman Gold; Vasileios Paschalidis; Milton Ruiz; Stuart L. Shapiro; Zachariah B. Etienne; Harald P. Pfeiffer

\ensuremath{\sim}1{0}^{15}(M/1{0}^{8}{M}_{\ensuremath{\bigodot}}{)}^{\ensuremath{-}1/4}(L/{L}_{\text{edd}}{)}^{1/4}(1+z{)}^{\ensuremath{-}1}\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{Hz}

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Joshua A. Faber

Rochester Institute of Technology

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Manuela Campanelli

Rochester Institute of Technology

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Bernard J. Kelly

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Luisa T. Buchman

California Institute of Technology

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Tony Chu

California Institute of Technology

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