Synopsis

Searching for Neutron Star Gravitational Waves

Physics 10, s98
The first run of LIGO and Virgo’s gravitational-wave search shows no evidence of spinning asymmetric neutron stars, but recent upgrades could make the detection possible.

Colliding black holes aren’t the only astronomical events that can warp spacetime, emitting gravitational waves that are detectable on Earth. Neutron stars that don’t spin symmetrically, for example, are also predicted to radiate a continuous stream of gravitational waves. The collaborations behind the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO), in the US, and the Virgo gravitational-wave experiment, in Europe, have now combed through the data from their first observing run, looking for such a signal. The researchers couldn’t find any sign of the spacetime distortions that might result from spinning neutron stars. However, their analysis indicates that the recent detector upgrades could provide the instruments with the sensitivity needed to pick up these signals.

Neutron stars, the densest objects in the Universe, can rotate up to several hundred times per second. If the star has a perfectly spherical shape then it won’t emit gravitational waves as it spins. But if its surface is bumpy—these bumps need only be a few centimeters tall—or if the star has other imperfections in its shape, the spinning asymmetry would generate gravitational waves. According to predictions, these gravitational waves should manifest as a constant background “hum” in the signals measured by gravitational-wave detectors.

Using four different algorithms to analyze data taken between September 12, 2015, and January 19, 2016—the period during which LIGO recorded gravitational waves for the first time (see 11 February 2016 Viewpoint)—the team found no evidence for continuous gravitational-wave signals. But upgrades since then have increased the detectors’ sensitivities by a factor of 3 in the frequency range expected for spinning neutron stars. Ongoing upgrades should yield another factor of 3 improvement, potentially enabling the instruments to detect these signals.

This research is published in Physical Review D.

–Katherine Wright

Katherine Wright is a Contributing Editor for Physics.


Subject Areas

AstrophysicsGravitation

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