"Blip glitches" are a type of short duration transient noise in LIGO data. The cause for the majority of these is currently unknown. Short duration transient noise creates challenges for searches of the highest mass binary black hole systems, as standard methods of applying signal consistency, which look for consistency in the accumulated signal-to-noise of the candidate event, are unable to distinguish many blip glitches from short duration gravitational-wave signals. We demonstrate a straightforward method, employed during Advanced LIGO's second observing run, including the period of joint observation with the Virgo observatory, to separate the majority of this transient noise from potential gravitational-wave sources. This yields a $\sim...
We present a systematic comparison of the binary black hole (BBH) signal waveform reconstructed by t...
Extracting astrophysical information from gravitational-wave detections is a well-posed problem and ...
Gravitational wave (GW) signals were recently detected directly by LIGO from the coalescences of two...
"Blip glitches" are a type of short duration transient noise in LIGO data. The cause for the majorit...
Blip glitches are short noise transients present in data from ground-based gravitational-wave observ...
The short-duration noise transients in LIGO and Virgo detectors significantlyaffect the search sensi...
The recent completion of Advanced LIGO suggests that gravitational waves may soon be directly observ...
The principal problem of gravitational wave detection is distinguishing true gravitational wave sign...
The output of gravitational-wave interferometers, such as LIGO and Virgo, can be highly non-stationa...
Published 7 June 2016The gravitational-wave signal GW150914 was first identified on September 14, 20...
The gravitational-wave signal GW150914 was first identified on September 14, 2015, by searches for s...
Gravitational wave astronomy is established with direct observation of gravitational wave from mergi...
We present the results of a search for long-duration gravitational-wave transients in the data from ...
We present a systematic comparison of the binary black hole (BBH) signal waveform reconstructed by t...
Extracting astrophysical information from gravitational-wave detections is a well-posed problem and ...
Gravitational wave (GW) signals were recently detected directly by LIGO from the coalescences of two...
"Blip glitches" are a type of short duration transient noise in LIGO data. The cause for the majorit...
Blip glitches are short noise transients present in data from ground-based gravitational-wave observ...
The short-duration noise transients in LIGO and Virgo detectors significantlyaffect the search sensi...
The recent completion of Advanced LIGO suggests that gravitational waves may soon be directly observ...
The principal problem of gravitational wave detection is distinguishing true gravitational wave sign...
The output of gravitational-wave interferometers, such as LIGO and Virgo, can be highly non-stationa...
Published 7 June 2016The gravitational-wave signal GW150914 was first identified on September 14, 20...
The gravitational-wave signal GW150914 was first identified on September 14, 2015, by searches for s...
Gravitational wave astronomy is established with direct observation of gravitational wave from mergi...
We present the results of a search for long-duration gravitational-wave transients in the data from ...
We present a systematic comparison of the binary black hole (BBH) signal waveform reconstructed by t...
Extracting astrophysical information from gravitational-wave detections is a well-posed problem and ...
Gravitational wave (GW) signals were recently detected directly by LIGO from the coalescences of two...