Search for post-merger gravitational waves from the remnant of the binary neutron star merger GW170817
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 study searched for gravitational waves from the remnant of GW170817 using advanced detectors, setting upper limits on possible post-merger signals and suggesting future detectability with improved sensitivity.
Contribution
The paper presents the first targeted search for post-merger gravitational waves from GW170817, establishing upper limits and informing future detector sensitivity requirements.
Findings
No post-merger gravitational waves detected
Upper limits are above most model predictions
Future detectors may observe similar post-merger signals
Abstract
The first observation of a binary neutron star coalescence by the Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo gravitational-wave detectors offers an unprecedented opportunity to study matter under the most extreme conditions. After such a merger, a compact remnant is left over whose nature depends primarily on the masses of the inspiralling objects and on the equation of state of nuclear matter. This could be either a black hole or a neutron star (NS), with the latter being either long-lived or too massive for stability implying delayed collapse to a black hole. Here, we present a search for gravitational waves from the remnant of the binary neutron star merger GW170817 using data from Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo. We search for short ( s) and intermediate-duration ( s) signals, which includes gravitational-wave emission from a hypermassive NS or supramassive NS,…
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.
