Advanced VIRGO: detector optimization for gravitational waves by inspiralling binaries
Alessandro D.A.M. Spallicci, Sofiane Aoudia, Jose De Freitas Pacheco,, Giorgio Frossati, Tania Regimbau

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how reducing specific noise sources in the VIRGO gravitational wave detector can optimize its sensitivity to inspiralling binaries, identifying key frequency ranges and noise reductions for improved detection rates.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of noise reduction strategies in VIRGO, highlighting the most effective noise sources to target for enhanced gravitational wave detection.
Findings
Reducing mirror thermal noise yields the highest SNR gain.
Optimal noise reduction depends on specific frequency ranges.
A proposed improved VIRGO configuration could increase detection rate to 1.5 events per year.
Abstract
For future configurations, we study the relation between the abatement of the noise sources and the Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) for coalescing binaries. Our aim is not the proposition of a new design, but an indication of where in the bandwidth or for which noise source, a noise reduction would be most efficient. We take VIRGO as the reference for our considerations, solely applicable to the inspiralling phase of a coalescing binary. Thus, only neutron stars and small black holes of few solar masses are encompassed by our analysis. The contributions to the SNR given by final merge and quasi-normal ringing are neglected. It is identified that i) the reduction in the mirror thermal noise band provides the highest gain for the SNR, when the VIRGO bandwidth is divided according to the dominant noises; ii) it exists a specific frequency at which lies the potential largest increment in the…
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