First low frequency all-sky search for continuous gravitational wave signals
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration, the Virgo Collaboration: J., Aasi, B. P. Abbott, R. Abbott, T. D. Abbott, M. R. Abernathy, F. Acernese, K., Ackley, C. Adams, T. Adams, P. Addesso, R. X. Adhikari, V. B. Adya, C., Affeldt, M. Agathos, K. Agatsuma, N. Aggarwal, O. D. Aguiar

TL;DR
This paper reports the first all-sky search for continuous gravitational waves at low frequencies (20-128 Hz) using Virgo data, setting upper limits on strain and demonstrating the feasibility of such searches.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchical search method for low-frequency gravitational waves and provides the first all-sky search results below 50 Hz with improved upper limits.
Findings
No continuous gravitational wave signals detected.
Set upper limits on strain between 10^{-24} and 2×10^{-23}.
Achieved up to twofold improvement over previous searches.
Abstract
In this paper we present the results of the first low frequency all-sky search of continuous gravitational wave signals conducted on Virgo VSR2 and VSR4 data. The search covered the full sky, a frequency range between 20 Hz and 128 Hz with a range of spin-down between Hz/s and Hz/s, and was based on a hierarchical approach. The starting point was a set of short Fast Fourier Transforms (FFT), of length 8192 seconds, built from the calibrated strain data. Aggressive data cleaning, both in the time and frequency domains, has been done in order to remove, as much as possible, the effect of disturbances of instrumental origin. On each dataset a number of candidates has been selected, using the FrequencyHough transform in an incoherent step. Only coincident candidates among VSR2 and VSR4 have been examined in order to strongly reduce the false…
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