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Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 181102 (2009) [4 pages]

Exploiting Large-Scale Correlations to Detect Continuous Gravitational Waves

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Holger J. Pletsch1,* and Bruce Allen1,2,†
1Max-Planck-Institut für Gravitationsphysik (Albert-Einstein-Institut), Callinstraße 38, D-30167 Hannover, Germany
2Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Post Office Box 413, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201, USA

Received 2 June 2009; published 27 October 2009

Fully coherent searches (over realistic ranges of parameter space and year-long observation times) for unknown sources of continuous gravitational waves are computationally prohibitive. Less expensive hierarchical searches divide the data into shorter segments which are analyzed coherently, then detection statistics from different segments are combined incoherently. The novel method presented here solves the long-standing problem of how best to do the incoherent combination. The optimal solution exploits large-scale parameter-space correlations in the coherent detection statistic. Application to simulated data shows dramatic sensitivity improvements compared with previously available (ad hoc) methods, increasing the spatial volume probed by more than 2 orders of magnitude at lower computational cost.

© 2009 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.181102
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.181102
PACS:
04.80.Nn, 95.55.Ym, 95.75.−z, 97.60.Jd

*Holger.Pletsch@aei.mpg.de

Bruce.Allen@aei.mpg.de