Detection of GW190814 from the coalescence of a 23 solar-mass black hole and a 2.6 solar-mass compact object, the most unequal-mass binary yet observed with gravitational waves.
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Statistical combination of sub-threshold post-merger signals from 50-70 BNS events can constrain the maximum mass of hot neutron stars to 11-20% fractional uncertainty, potentially translating to 12-21% on the cold TOV mass.
A Gaussian process framework with a localized-deviation kernel is used to test general relativity on simulated and GWTC-3 binary black hole signals, finding no evidence for deviations and limiting strain deviations to 7% for one event.
Score-based diffusion models learn the empirical distribution of real LIGO noise to enable unbiased gravitational-wave parameter estimation under only an additivity assumption.
Gravitational wave remnants from GWTC-4.0 binary mergers are consistent with general relativity Kerr black hole predictions, with no evidence for post-merger echoes.
citing papers explorer
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GW190814: Gravitational Waves from the Coalescence of a 23 M$_\odot$ Black Hole with a 2.6 M$_\odot$ Compact Object
Detection of GW190814 from the coalescence of a 23 solar-mass black hole and a 2.6 solar-mass compact object, the most unequal-mass binary yet observed with gravitational waves.
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Sub-threshold post-merger gravitational waves can constrain the hot nuclear equation of state
Statistical combination of sub-threshold post-merger signals from 50-70 BNS events can constrain the maximum mass of hot neutron stars to 11-20% fractional uncertainty, potentially translating to 12-21% on the cold TOV mass.
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A Gaussian process framework for testing general relativity with gravitational waves
A Gaussian process framework with a localized-deviation kernel is used to test general relativity on simulated and GWTC-3 binary black hole signals, finding no evidence for deviations and limiting strain deviations to 7% for one event.
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Gravitational-Wave Parameter Estimation in non-Gaussian noise using Score-Based Likelihood Characterization
Score-based diffusion models learn the empirical distribution of real LIGO noise to enable unbiased gravitational-wave parameter estimation under only an additivity assumption.
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GWTC-4.0: Tests of General Relativity. III. Tests of the Remnants
Gravitational wave remnants from GWTC-4.0 binary mergers are consistent with general relativity Kerr black hole predictions, with no evidence for post-merger echoes.