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Ilya Mandel

Researcher at Monash University

Publications -  425
Citations -  55243

Ilya Mandel is an academic researcher from Monash University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gravitational wave & LIGO. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 401 publications receiving 46592 citations. Previous affiliations of Ilya Mandel include Swinburne University of Technology & University of Birmingham.

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Scientific Potential of Einstein Telescope

Bangalore Suryanarayana Sathyaprakash, +136 more
TL;DR: Einstein gravitational-wave Telescope (ET) is a design study funded by the European Commission to explore the technological challenges of and scientific benefits from building a third generation gravitational wave detector as discussed by the authors.
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Common Envelope Wind Tunnel: The Effects of Binary Mass Ratio and Implications for the Accretion-Driven Growth of LIGO Binary Black Holes

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of varying the binary mass ratio, stellar structure, equation of state, relative Mach number of the object's motion through the gas, and density gradients across the gravitational focusing scale are studied.
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Testing general relativity with compact coalescing binaries: comparing exact and predictive methods to compute the Bayes factor

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed an approximate scheme to compute the Bayes factor between a GR gravitational-wave model and a model representing a class of alternative theories of gravity parametrized by one additional parameter.
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Probing seed black holes using future gravitational-wave detectors

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compute the sensitivity of various future ground-based detectors to seed black hole mergers, and use this to explore the number and properties of the events that each detector might see in three years of observation.
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Detectability of Gravitational Waves from High-Redshift Binaries.

TL;DR: The capabilities of current gravitational-wave observatories to detect individual binaries are studied and it is demonstrated that, contrary to conventional wisdom, some are, in principle, detectable throughout the Universe.