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Sebastian Steinlechner

Researcher at Maastricht University

Publications -  303
Citations -  77646

Sebastian Steinlechner is an academic researcher from Maastricht University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gravitational wave & LIGO. The author has an hindex of 93, co-authored 299 publications receiving 62949 citations. Previous affiliations of Sebastian Steinlechner include Glasgow Caledonian University & Max Planck Society.

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Diving below the spin-down limit: Constraints on gravitational waves from the energetic young pulsar PSR J0537-6910

Richard J. Abbott, +1588 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a search for continuous gravitational-wave signals from the young, energetic X-ray pulsar PSR J0537-6910 using data from the second and third observing runs of LIGO and Virgo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Erratum: Searches for Gravitational Waves from Known Pulsars at Two Harmonics in 2015-2017 LIGO Data (Astrophysical Journal (2019) 879 (10) DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/Ab20cb)

B. P. Abbott, +1231 more
TL;DR: In this article, two analysis errors have been identified that affect the results for a handful of the high-value pulsars given in Table 1 of Abbott et al. (2019).

Effects of data quality vetoes on a search for compact binary coalescences in Advanced LIGO’s first observing run

B. P. Abbott, +956 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the PyCBC pipeline is used to search for gravitational wave signals from compact binary coalescences, and it is shown that the removal of noisy data from analysis time can improve the sensitivity of searches for binary coalescence.

Search for continuous gravitational wave emission from the Milky Way center in O3 LIGO-Virgo data

The Ligo Scientific Collaboration, +1649 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors present a directed search for continuous gravitational wave (CW) signals emitted by spinning neutron stars located in the inner parsecs of the Galactic Center (GC).
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Constraints on the cosmic expansion history from GWTC-3.

R. Abbott, +1674 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used 47 gravitational-wave sources from the Third LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog (GWTC-3) to estimate the Hubble parameter $H(z), including its current value, the Hubble constant $H_0.