Prospects for detecting and localizing short-duration transient gravitational waves from glitching neutron stars without electromagnetic counterparts
Dixeena Lopez, Shubhanshu Tiwari, Marco Drago, David Keitel, Claudia, Lazzaro, Giovanni Andrea Prodi

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential for detecting short-duration gravitational waves from glitching neutron stars using all-sky searches, focusing on upcoming detector sensitivities and localization capabilities without electromagnetic counterparts.
Contribution
It introduces a method to detect and localize gravitational waves from neutron star glitches in a high-frequency range, providing upper limits and future prospects for multiple detectors.
Findings
Detectable glitch size around 10^{-5} Hz for upcoming runs.
Localization area approximately 132 square degrees at 1σ confidence.
Prospects for identifying neutron star glitches without electromagnetic signals.
Abstract
Neutron stars are known to show accelerated spin-up of their rotational frequency called a glitch. Highly magnetized rotating neutron stars (pulsars) are frequently observed by radio telescopes (and in other frequencies), where the glitch is observed as irregular arrival times of pulses which are otherwise very regular. A glitch in an isolated neutron star can excite the fundamental (f)-mode oscillations which can lead to gravitational wave generation. Electromagnetic observations of pulsars (and hence pulsar glitches) require the pulsar to be oriented so that the jet is pointed toward the detector, but this is not a requirement for gravitational wave emission which is more isotropic and not jetlike. Hence, gravitational wave observations have the potential to uncover nearby neutron stars where the jet is not pointed towards the Earth. In this work, we study the prospects of finding…
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