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I. Dave

Researcher at Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology

Publications -  178
Citations -  59001

I. Dave is an academic researcher from Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: LIGO & Gravitational wave. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 167 publications receiving 47156 citations. Previous affiliations of I. Dave include Max Planck Society.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Rate of Binary Black Hole Mergers Inferred from Advanced LIGO Observations Surrounding GW150914

B. P. Abbott, +988 more
Abstract: A transient gravitational-wave signal, GW150914, was identified in the twin Advanced LIGO detectors on September 14, 2015 at 09:50:45 UTC. To assess the implications of this discovery, the detectors remained in operation with unchanged configurations over a period of 39 d around the time of the signal. At the detection statistic threshold corresponding to that observed for GW150914, our search of the 16 days of simultaneous two-detector observational data is estimated to have a false alarm rate (FAR) of < 4.9 × 10^(−6) yr^(−1), yielding a p-value for GW150914 of < 2 × 10^(−7). Parameter estimation followup on this trigger identifies its source as a binary black hole (BBH) merger with component masses (m_1, m_2) = (36^(+5)_(−4), 29^(+4)_(−4)) M_⊙ at redshift z = 0.09^(+0.03)_(−0.04) (median and 90\% credible range). Here we report on the constraints these observations place on the rate of BBH coalescences. Considering only GW150914, assuming that all BBHs in the Universe have the same masses and spins as this event, imposing a search FAR threshold of 1 per 100 years, and assuming that the BBH merger rate is constant in the comoving frame, we infer a 90% credible range of merger rates between 2--53 Gpc^(−3) yr^(−1) (comoving frame). Incorporating all search triggers that pass a much lower threshold while accounting for the uncertainty in the astrophysical origin of each trigger, we estimate a higher rate, ranging from 13--600 Gpc^(−3) yr^(−1) depending on assumptions about the BBH mass distribution. All together, our various rate estimates fall in the conservative range 2--600 Gpc^(−3) yr^(−1).
Journal Article

Prospects for observing and localizing gravitational-wave transients with Advanced LIGO, Advanced Virgo and KAGRA

B. P. Abbott, +1101 more
TL;DR: The sensitivity of the LIGO network to transient gravitational-wave signals is estimated, and the capability of the network to determine the sky location of the source is studied, to facilitate planning for multi-messenger astronomy with gravitational waves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Search for the isotropic stochastic background using data from Advanced LIGO's second observing run

B. P. Abbott, +1133 more
- 15 Sep 2019 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a cross-correlation analysis on the data from Advanced LIGO's second observing run (O2) is presented, which combines with the results of the first observing run, and upper limits on the normalized energy density in gravitational waves at the 95% credible level of ΩGW < 6.0 × 10−8 at 25 Hz for a background of compact binary coalescences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Search for Post-merger Gravitational Waves from the Remnant of the Binary Neutron Star Merger GW170817

B. P. Abbott, +1140 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a search for GWs from the remnant of the binary neutron star merger GW170817 using data from Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo.
Journal Article

GW150914: First results from the search for binary black hole coalescence with Advanced LIGO

B. P. Abbott, +979 more
TL;DR: A matched-filter search using relativistic models of compact-object binaries that recovered GW150914 as the most significant event during the coincident observations between the two LIGO detectors from September 12 to October 20, 2015.