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Efficient gravitational-wave glitch identification from environmental data through machine learning

The LIGO observatories detect gravitational waves through monitoring changes in the detectors' length down to below 10−19 m / √ Hz variations-a small fraction of the size of the atoms that make up the detector. To achieve this sensitivity, the detector and its environment need to be closely mon...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Physical review. D 2020-05, Vol.101 (10), p.1, Article 102003
Main Authors: Colgan, Robert E., Corley, K. Rainer, Lau, Yenson, Bartos, Imre, Wright, John N., Márka, Zsuzsa, Márka, Szabolcs
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The LIGO observatories detect gravitational waves through monitoring changes in the detectors' length down to below 10−19 m / √ Hz variations-a small fraction of the size of the atoms that make up the detector. To achieve this sensitivity, the detector and its environment need to be closely monitored. Beyond the gravitational-wave data stream, LIGO continuously records hundreds of thousands of channels of environmental and instrumental data in order to monitor for possibly minuscule variations that contribute to the detector noise. A particularly challenging issue is the appearance in the gravitational wave signal of brief, loud noise artifacts called "glitches," which are environmental or instrumental in origin but can mimic true gravitational waves and therefore hinder sensitivity. Currently, they are primarily identified by analysis of the gravitational-wave data stream, and auxiliary data channels often provide corroborating evidence. Here we present a machine learning approach that can identify glitches by considering all environmental and detector data channels, a task that has not previously been pursued due to its scale and the number of degrees of freedom within gravitational-wave detectors. The presented method is capable of reducing the gravitational-wave detector network's false alarm rate and improving the LIGO instruments, consequently enhancing detection confidence.
ISSN:2470-0010
2470-0029
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevD.101.102003