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Characterizing the efficacy of methods to subtract terrestrial transient noise near gravitational wave events and the effects on parameter estimation

POSTER

Abstract

Gravitational wave signals received by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO) from binary black hole coalescences can overlap in time with non-gaussian transient instrumental noise, also known as a glitch. Glitches introduce errors in the analysis of a signal since the parameters of the astrophysical system (mass, spin, location, etc.) are inferred by comparing gravitational waveforms with the data. By adding known simulated signals into data containing glitches from both the LIGO Livingston and Hanford detectors, we study how different classes of glitches affect parameter estimation. In extension, we use BayesWave (software that models a glitch and a signal as a separate sum of wavelets) to explore how one of our most promising methods of glitch-subtraction improves the analysis.

Authors

  • Joshua Brandt

    Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Sudarshan Ghonge

    Georgia Institute of Technology

  • John Sullivan

    Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Nadia Qutob

    Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Katerina Chatziioannou

    California Institute of Technology

  • James Clark

    California Institute of Technology

  • Tyson Littenberg

    National Aeronautics and Space Administration

  • Margaret Millhouse

    University of Melbourne

  • Neil Cornish

    Montana State University

  • Laura Cadonati

    Georgia Institute of Technology