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Institut d'Astrophysique et
de Géophysique (Bât. B5c)

Quartier Agora
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Seminars : Documents

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Seminar n°10: Thursday 22 september, 16h00
Searching for long-duration transient gravitational waves from glitching pulsars using Convolutional Neural Networks
Luana Modafferi (Universitat de les Illes Balears and LIGO)

Pulsars are spinning neutron stars which emit an electromagnetic beam. We expect pulsars to slowly decrease their rotational frequency due to the radiation emission. However, sudden increases of the rotational frequency have been observed from different pulsars. These events are called "glitches", and are followed by a relaxation phase with timescales from days to months. Gravitational-wave (GW) emission may follow these peculiar events, including long-duration transient continuous waves (tCWs) lasting hours to months. These are modelled similarly to continuous waves but are limited in time. Previous studies have searched for tCWs from glitching pulsars with matched filtering techniques and by computing a detection statistic, the F-statistic. This method is very sensitive, but the computational costs can easily increase when widening the frequency and spindown search bands and the duration of the potential signals.

In order to reduce computational and human effort, we present a procedure for detecting potential tCWs using Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). For our initial configuration, we train the CNN on F-statistic "atoms", i.e. quantities computed during the matched filtering step from signal/noise data. This still constrains the frequency evolution of the signal to be continuous-wave-like, but already allows for flexible amplitude evolution and significant speed-up compared to the traditional method.
University of Liège > Faculty of Sciences > Department of Astrophysics, Geophysics and Oceanography : CoWebAGO, Juin 2009.