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Hidden Markov model tracking of continuous gravitational waves from a binary neutron star with wandering spin. III. Rotational phase tracking

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 18:50 authored by Andrew Melatos, P Clearwater, Sofia Suvorova, Lunan Sun, William MoranWilliam Moran, Robin Evans
A hidden Markov model (HMM) solved recursively by the Viterbi algorithm can be configured to search for persistent, quasimonochromatic gravitational radiation from an isolated or accreting neutron star, whose rotational frequency is unknown and wanders stochastically. Here an existing HMM analysis pipeline is generalized to track rotational phase and frequency simultaneously, by modeling the intrastep rotational evolution according to a phase-wrapped Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process, and by calculating the emission probability using a phase-sensitive version of the Bayesian matched filter known as the B-statistic, which is more sensitive than its predecessors. The generalized algorithm tracks signals from isolated and binary sources with characteristic wave strain h0≥1.3×10-26 in Gaussian noise with amplitude spectral density 4×10-24 Hz-1/2, for a simulated observation composed of NT=37 data segments, each Tdrift=10 days long, the typical duration of a search for the low-mass x-ray binary (LMXB) Sco X-1 with the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO). It is equally sensitive to isolated and binary sources and ≈1.5 times more sensitive than the previous pipeline, which achieves h0≥2.0×10-26 for a comparable search. Receiver operating characteristic curves (to demonstrate a recipe for setting detection thresholds) and errors in the recovered parameters are presented for a range of practical h0 and NT values. The generalized algorithm successfully detects every available synthetic signal in Stage I of the Sco X-1 Mock Data Challenge convened by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, recovering the frequency and orbital semimajor axis with accuracies of better than 9.5×10-7 Hz (one part in ∼108) and 1.6×10-3 lt s (one part in ∼103) respectively. The Viterbi solver runs in ≈2×103 CPU-hr for an isolated source and ∼105 CPU-hr for a LMXB source in a typical, broadband (0.5-kHz) search, i.e., 10 times slower than the previous pipeline.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Physical Review D

Volume

104

Number

042003

Issue

4

Start page

1

End page

33

Total pages

33

Publisher

American Physical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2021 American Physical Society

Former Identifier

2006111253

Esploro creation date

2022-11-20

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