All-sky, all-frequency directional search for persistent gravitational-waves from Advanced LIGO's and Advanced Virgo's first three observing runs
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration, the Virgo Collaboration, and the, KAGRA Collaboration: R. Abbott, T. D. Abbott, F. Acernese, K. Ackley, C., Adams, N. Adhikari, R. X. Adhikari, V. B. Adya, C. Affeldt, D. Agarwal, M., Agathos, K. Agatsuma, N. Aggarwal, O. D. Aguiar, L. Aiello

TL;DR
This paper reports a comprehensive all-sky, all-frequency search for narrowband gravitational-wave signals using LIGO and Virgo data, setting upper limits and proposing follow-up methods for potential faint signals.
Contribution
It introduces an efficient pipeline for narrowband gravitational-wave searches across the sky and frequencies, improving sensitivity to monochromatic signals.
Findings
No significant narrowband signals detected.
Upper limits on strain range from 0.030 to 9.6 x 10^{-24}.
Method for follow-up candidate identification proposed.
Abstract
We present the first results from an all-sky all-frequency (ASAF) search for an anisotropic stochastic gravitational-wave background using the data from the first three observing runs of the Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo detectors. Upper limit maps on broadband anisotropies of a persistent stochastic background were published for all observing runs of the LIGO-Virgo detectors. However, a broadband analysis is likely to miss narrowband signals as the signal-to-noise ratio of a narrowband signal can be significantly reduced when combined with detector output from other frequencies. Data folding and the computationally efficient analysis pipeline, {\tt PyStoch}, enable us to perform the radiometer map-making at every frequency bin. We perform the search at 3072 {\tt{HEALPix}} equal area pixels uniformly tiling the sky and in every frequency bin of width ~Hz in the range…
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