1,474 research outputs found
Long term study of the seismic environment at LIGO
The LIGO experiment aims to detect and study gravitational waves using ground
based laser interferometry. A critical factor to the performance of the
interferometers, and a major consideration in the design of possible future
upgrades, is isolation of the interferometer optics from seismic noise. We
present the results of a detailed program of measurements of the seismic
environment surrounding the LIGO interferometers. We describe the experimental
configuration used to collect the data, which was acquired over a 613 day
period. The measurements focused on the frequency range 0.1-10 Hz, in which the
secondary microseismic peak and noise due to human activity in the vicinity of
the detectors was found to be particularly critical to interferometer
performance. We compare the statistical distribution of the data sets from the
two interferometer sites, construct amplitude spectral densities of seismic
noise amplitude fluctuations with periods of up to 3 months, and analyze the
data for any long term trends in the amplitude of seismic noise in this
critical frequency range.Comment: To be published in Classical and Quantum Gravity. 24 pages, 15
figure
A Study of Inclusive Double-Pomeron-Exchange in p pbar -> p X pbar at root s = 630 GeV
We report measurements of the inclusive reaction, p pbar -> p X pbar, in
events where either or both the beam-like final-state baryons were detected in
Roman-pot spectrometers and the central system was detected in the UA2
calorimeter. A Double-Pomeron-Exchange (DPE) analysis of these data and single
diffractive data from the same experiment demonstrates that, for central masses
of a few GeV, the extracted Pomeron-Pomeron total cross section exhibits an
enhancement which exceeds factorization expectations by an order-of-magnitude.
This may be a signature for glueball production. The enhancement is shown to be
independent of uncertainties connected with possible non-universality of the
Pomeron flux factor. Based on our analysis, we present DPE cross section
predictions, for unit (1 mb) Pomeron-Pomeron total cross section, at the
Tevatron, LHC and the 920 GeV fixed-target experiment, HERA-B.Comment: 52 pages, 27 Encapsulated Postscript figures, 3 Tables, LaTex,
Revised version as it will appear in European Physics Journal
Cross Section Measurements of Hard Diffraction at the SPS-Collider
The UA8 experiment previously reported the observation of jets in diffractive
events containing leading protons (``hard diffraction''), which was interpreted
as evidence for the partonic structure of an exchanged Reggeon, believed to be
the Pomeron . In the present Letter, we report the final UA8 hard-diffractive
(jet) cross section results and their interpretation. After corrections, the
fraction of single diffractive events with mass from 118 to 189 GeV that have
two scattered partons, each with Et_jet > 8 GeV, is in the range 0.002 to 0.003
(depending on x_p). We determine the product, fK, of the fraction by which the
Pomeron's momentum sum rule is violated and the normalization constant of the
Pomeron-Flux-Factor of the proton. For a pure gluonic- or a pure qqbar-Pomeron
, respectively: fK = 0.30 +- 0.05 +- 0.09) and (0.56 +- 0.09 +- 0.17) GeV^-2.Comment: 20 pages, 5 Encapsulated Postscript figures, LaTex, Final Version,
Physics Letters B (in Pess 1998
Pseudorapidity Distribution of Charged Particles in PbarP Collisions at root(s)= 630GeV
Using a silicon vertex detector, we measure the charged particle
pseudorapidity distribution over the range 1.5 to 5.5 using data collected from
PbarP collisions at root s = 630 GeV. With a data sample of 3 million events,
we deduce a result with an overall normalization uncertainty of 5%, and typical
bin to bin errors of a few percent. We compare our result to the measurement of
UA5, and the distribution generated by the Lund Monte Carlo with default
settings. This is only the second measurement at this level of precision, and
only the second measurement for pseudorapidity greater than 3.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX format. For ps file see
http://hep1.physics.wayne.edu/harr/harr.html Submitted to Physics Letters
Search for Gravitational-wave Inspiral Signals Associated with Short Gamma-ray Bursts During LIGO's Fifth and Virgo's First Science Run
Progenitor scenarios for short gamma-ray bursts (short GRBs) include coalescenses of two neutron stars or a neutron star and black hole, which would necessarily be accompanied by the emission of strong gravitational waves. We present a search for these known gravitational-wave signatures in temporal and directional coincidence with 22 GRBs that had sufficient gravitational-wave data available in multiple instruments during LIGO's fifth science run, S5, and Virgo's first science run, VSR1. We find no statistically significant gravitational-wave candidates within a [ – 5, + 1) s window around the trigger time of any GRB. Using the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney U-test, we find no evidence for an excess of weak gravitational-wave signals in our sample of GRBs. We exclude neutron star-black hole progenitors to a median 90% confidence exclusion distance of 6.7 Mpc
Upper Limits on a Stochastic Background of Gravitational Waves
The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory has performed a third science run with much improved sensitivities of all three interferometers. We present an analysis of approximately 200 hours of data acquired during this run, used to search for a stochastic background of gravitational radiation. We place upper bounds on the energy density stored as gravitational radiation for three different spectral power laws. For the flat spectrum, our limit of Ω_0<8.4×10^(-4) in the 69–156 Hz band is ~10^5 times lower than the previous result in this frequency range
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