GW170814: A Three-Detector Observation of Gravitational Waves from a Binary Black Hole Coalescence
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration, the Virgo Collaboration: B. P., Abbott, R. Abbott, T. D. Abbott, F. Acernese, K. Ackley, C. Adams, T. Adams,, P. Addesso, R. X. Adhikari, V. B. Adya, C. Affeldt, M. Afrough, B. Agarwal,, M. Agathos, K. Agatsuma, N. Aggarwal, O. D. Aguiar

TL;DR
This paper reports the first three-detector observation of a gravitational wave from a binary black hole merger, improving source localization and enabling tests of gravitational wave polarization.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of a gravitational wave with a three-detector network, enhancing localization and allowing new tests of gravity.
Findings
Detected a binary black hole merger with high confidence
Significantly improved sky localization with three detectors
Enabled new tests of gravitational wave polarization
Abstract
On August 14, 2017 at 10:30:43 UTC, the Advanced Virgo detector and the two Advanced LIGO detectors coherently observed a transient gravitational-wave signal produced by the coalescence of two stellar mass black holes, with a false-alarm-rate of 1 in 27000 years. The signal was observed with a three-detector network matched-filter signal-to-noise ratio of 18. The inferred masses of the initial black holes are Msun and Msun (at the 90% credible level). The luminosity distance of the source is , corresponding to a redshift of . A network of three detectors improves the sky localization of the source, reducing the area of the 90% credible region from 1160 deg using only the two LIGO detectors to 60 deg using all three detectors. For the first time, we can test the nature of…
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