Accretion-induced spin-wandering effects on the neutron star in Scorpius X-1: Implications for continuous gravitational wave searches
Arunava Mukherjee (1, 2), Chris Messenger (3), Keith Riles (4) ((1), AEI-MPI Hannover, (2) ICTS-TIFR, (3) Univ. of Glasgow, (4) Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how accretion-induced spin fluctuations in the neutron star of Sco X-1 affect gravitational wave detection, providing insights to improve search algorithms for continuous signals.
Contribution
It quantifies the statistical properties of spin-wandering effects on gravitational wave signals from Sco X-1, guiding future search strategies.
Findings
Maximum frequency drift of 0.3-50 μHz/sec over a year.
Coherent signal integration time should be limited to 5-80 days.
Results inform the development of more robust gravitational wave search algorithms.
Abstract
The LIGO's discovery of binary black hole mergers has opened up a new era of transient gravitational wave astronomy. The potential detection of gravitational radiation from another class of astronomical objects, rapidly spinning non-axisymmetric neutron stars, would constitute a new area of gravitational wave astronomy. Scorpius X-1 (Sco X-1) is one of the most promising sources of continuous gravitational radiation to be detected with present-generation ground-based gravitational wave detectors, such as Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo. As the sensitivity of these detectors improve in the coming years, so will power of the search algorithms being used to find gravitational wave signals. Those searches will still require integation over nearly year long observational spans to detect the incredibly weak signals from rotating neutron stars. For low mass X-ray binaries such as Sco X-1 this…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
