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Ultrahigh-energy neutrino follow-up of gravitational wave events GW150914 and GW151226 with the Pierre Auger Observatory

  • (Pierre Auger Collaboration)
  • Universität Siegen
  • Instituto Superior Tecnico
  • INAF-IAPS
  • Sezione di Torino
  • Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et de Hautes Energies
  • University of São Paulo
  • CNEA-UNCuyo-CONICET
  • Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica
  • Universidad Tecnológica Nacional
  • Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
  • Universidad de Santiago de Compostela
  • Sezione di Napoli
  • Gran Sasso Science Institute
  • Lehman College
  • Universidad Complutense de Madrid
  • University of Bucharest
  • Universidad Industrial de Santander
  • Observatorio Pierre Auger and Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica
  • University Politehnica of Bucharest
  • 'Horia Hulubei' National Institute for Physics and Nuclear Engineering
  • Institut für Experimentelle Kernphysik (IEKP)
  • Ohio State University
  • Bergische Universität Wuppertal
  • University of Adelaide
  • UJF-Grenoble 1/CNRS-INSU
  • Università di Torino and Sezione INFN
  • Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
  • Université Paris 11
  • Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
  • Universita del Salento
  • Sezione di Lecce
  • Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso
  • Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY)
  • Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
  • Institute of Nuclear Physics PAN
  • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
  • Colorado State University
  • RWTH Aachen University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

44 Scopus citations

Abstract

On September 14, 2015 the Advanced LIGO detectors observed their first gravitational wave (GW) transient GW150914. This was followed by a second GW event observed on December 26, 2015. Both events were inferred to have arisen from the merger of black holes in binary systems. Such a system may emit neutrinos if there are magnetic fields and disk debris remaining from the formation of the two black holes. With the surface detector array of the Pierre Auger Observatory we can search for neutrinos with energy Eν above 100 PeV from pointlike sources across the sky with equatorial declination from about -65° to +60°, and, in particular, from a fraction of the 90% confidence-level inferred positions in the sky of GW150914 and GW151226. A targeted search for highly inclined extensive air showers, produced either by interactions of downward-going neutrinos of all flavors in the atmosphere or by the decays of tau leptons originating from tau-neutrino interactions in the Earth's crust (Earth-skimming neutrinos), yielded no candidates in the Auger data collected within ±500 s around or 1 day after the coordinated universal time (UTC) of GW150914 and GW151226, as well as in the same search periods relative to the UTC time of the GW candidate event LVT151012. From the nonobservation we constrain the amount of energy radiated in ultrahigh-energy neutrinos from such remarkable events.

Original languageBritish English
Article number122007
JournalPhysical Review D
Volume94
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 Dec 2016

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