scispace - formally typeset
M

M. Steinke

Researcher at Albert Einstein Institution

Publications -  117
Citations -  53562

M. Steinke is an academic researcher from Albert Einstein Institution. The author has contributed to research in topics: LIGO & Gravitational wave. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 103 publications receiving 43101 citations. Previous affiliations of M. Steinke include Leibniz University of Hanover & Max Planck Society.

Papers
More filters
Journal Article

Multimessenger search for sources of gravitational waves and high-energy neutrinos: Initial results for LIGO-Virgo and IceCube

M. G. Aartsen, +1181 more
Journal ArticleDOI

Search for continuous gravitational waves from neutron stars in globular cluster NGC 6544

B. P. Abbott, +895 more
- 19 Apr 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a directed search for continuous gravitational waves in data from the sixth LIGO science run was described, where the target was the nearby globular cluster NGC 6544 at a distance of 2.7 kpc.

Localization and broadband follow-up of the gravitational-wave transient GW150914

B. P. Abbott, +1540 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the sky localization of the first observed compact binary merger is presented, where the authors describe the low-latency analysis of the LIGO data and present a sky localization map.
Journal ArticleDOI

Results of the deepest all-sky survey for continuous gravitational waves on LIGO S6 data running on the Einstein@Home volunteer distributed computing project

B. P. Abbott, +968 more
- 18 Nov 2016 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report results of a deep all-sky search for periodic gravitational waves from isolated neutron stars in data from the S6 LIGO science run and set the most stringent upper limits to date on the amplitude of gravitational wave signals from the target population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microplastic ingestion in zooplankton from the Fram Strait in the Arctic.

TL;DR: Using FTIR scanning spectroscopy in combination with an automated polymer identification approach, this paper showed that all five species of Arctic zooplankton investigated had ingested microplastics.