scispace - formally typeset
J

Jacob Slutsky

Researcher at Goddard Space Flight Center

Publications -  81
Citations -  5150

Jacob Slutsky is an academic researcher from Goddard Space Flight Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gravitational wave & LIGO. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 81 publications receiving 4261 citations. Previous affiliations of Jacob Slutsky include Leibniz University of Hanover.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Charge-induced force-noise on free-falling test masses: results from LISA Pathfinder

Michele Armano, +94 more
TL;DR: Electrostatic measurements made on board the European Space Agency mission LISA Pathfinder are the first made in a relevant environment for a space-based gravitational wave detector and resolve the stochastic nature of the TM charge buildup due to interplanetary cosmic rays and theTM charge-to-force coupling through stray electric fields in the sensor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Swift follow-up observations of candidate gravitational-wave transient events

P. A. Evans, +815 more
TL;DR: In this article, the first multi-wavelength follow-up observations of two candidate gravitational-wave (GW) transient events recorded by LIGO and Virgo in their 2009-2010 science run are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Publisher’s Note: Search for gravitational waves from binary black hole inspiral, merger, and ringdown

J. Abadie, +721 more
- 01 Jan 2011 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a survey of the state-of-the-art work in this area, including the following: A.A. Adhikari, P.B. Abadie, B.Babak, A.C. Anderson, W.M. Brandes, M.Barriga, E.C., A.B., C.C, C.Chaibi, O.Chakrabarty, O'Brien, O.'Brien, S.Capellaro, O 'Brien, T.
Journal ArticleDOI

GEO 600 and the GEO-HF upgrade program: successes and challenges

TL;DR: The German–British laser-interferometric gravitational wave detector GEO 600 is in its 14th year of operation since its first lock in 2001 and sensitivity improvements of up to a factor of four at the high-frequency end of the observation band have been achieved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implications For The Origin Of GRB 051103 From LIGO Observations

J. Abadie, +569 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the results of a LIGO search for gravitational waves (GWs) associated with GRB 051103, a short-duration hard-spectrum gamma-ray burst (GRB) whose electromagnetic determined sky position is coincident with the spiral galaxy M81, which is 3.6 Mpc from Earth, were presented.