Bayesian parameter estimation for targeted anisotropic gravitational-wave background
POSTER
Abstract
Extended sources of the stochastic gravitational backgrounds have been conventionally searched on the spherical harmonics bases. The analysis during the previous observing runs by the ground-based gravitational wave detectors, such as LIGO and Virgo, have yielded the constraints on the angular power spectrum $C_ell$, yet it lacks the capability of estimating other parameters such as a spectral index.
In this work, we introduce an alternative Bayesian formalism to search for such stochastic signals with a particular distribution of anisotropies on the sky. This approach provides a Bayesian posterior of model parameters and also enables selection tests among different signal models. While the conventional analysis fixes the highest angular scale a priori, here we show a more systematic and quantitative way to determine the cut-off scale based on a Bayes factor, which depends on the amplitude and the angular scale of observed signals.
Also, we analyze the third observing runs of LIGO and Virgo for the population of milli-second pulsars and obtain the 95 \% constraints of the signal amplitude, $epsilon < 2.7 imes 10^{-8}$.
In this work, we introduce an alternative Bayesian formalism to search for such stochastic signals with a particular distribution of anisotropies on the sky. This approach provides a Bayesian posterior of model parameters and also enables selection tests among different signal models. While the conventional analysis fixes the highest angular scale a priori, here we show a more systematic and quantitative way to determine the cut-off scale based on a Bayes factor, which depends on the amplitude and the angular scale of observed signals.
Also, we analyze the third observing runs of LIGO and Virgo for the population of milli-second pulsars and obtain the 95 \% constraints of the signal amplitude, $epsilon < 2.7 imes 10^{-8}$.
Publication: arXiv:2208.14421
Presenters
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Leo Tsukada
Pennsylvania State University
Authors
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Leo Tsukada
Pennsylvania State University
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Erik Floden
University of Minnesota
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Deepali Agarwal
Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Santiago Jaraba
Instituto de Fisica Teorica UAM-CSIC, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid