Upper limits on the rates of binary neutron star and neutron-star--black-hole mergers from Advanced LIGO's first observing run
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration, the Virgo Collaboration: 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, L. Aiello

TL;DR
This paper reports the non-detection of gravitational waves from binary neutron star and neutron-star--black-hole mergers during Advanced LIGO's first run, setting upper limits on their merger rates and implications for gamma-ray burst beaming angles.
Contribution
It provides the first upper limits on merger rates of binary neutron star and neutron-star--black-hole systems from LIGO's initial observations.
Findings
No gravitational wave detections during the run.
Upper limits on merger rates: <12,600 Gpc$^{-3}$yr$^{-1}$ for BNS.
Constraints on gamma-ray burst beaming angles.
Abstract
We report here the non-detection of gravitational waves from the merger of binary neutron star systems and neutron-star--black-hole systems during the first observing run of Advanced LIGO. In particular we searched for gravitational wave signals from binary neutron star systems with component masses and component dimensionless spins . We also searched for neutron-star--black-hole systems with the same neutron star parameters, black hole mass and no restriction on the black hole spin magnitude. We assess the sensitivity of the two LIGO detectors to these systems, and find that they could have detected the merger of binary neutron star systems with component mass distributions of at a volume-weighted average distance of 70Mpc, and for neutron-star--black-hole systems with neutron star masses of…
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