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Published June 21, 2012 | public
Journal Article

The NINJA-2 catalog of hybrid post-Newtonian/numerical-relativity waveforms for non-precessing black-hole binaries

Abstract

The numerical injection analysis (NINJA) project is a collaborative effort between members of the numerical-relativity and gravitational wave data-analysis communities. The purpose of NINJA is to study the sensitivity of existing gravitational-wave search and parameter-estimation algorithms using numerically generated waveforms and to foster closer collaboration between the numerical-relativity and data-analysis communities. The first NINJA project used only a small number of injections of short numerical-relativity waveforms, which limited its ability to draw quantitative conclusions. The goal of the NINJA-2 project is to overcome these limitations with long post-Newtonian—numerical-relativity hybrid waveforms, large numbers of injections and the use of real detector data. We report on the submission requirements for the NINJA-2 project and the construction of the waveform catalog. Eight numerical-relativity groups have contributed 56 hybrid waveforms consisting of a numerical portion modeling the late inspiral, merger and ringdown stitched to a post-Newtonian portion modeling the early inspiral. We summarize the techniques used by each group in constructing their submissions. We also report on the procedures used to validate these submissions, including examination in the time and frequency domains and comparisons of waveforms from different groups against each other. These procedures have so far considered only the (ℓ, m) = (2, 2) mode. Based on these studies, we judge that the hybrid waveforms are suitable for NINJA-2 studies. We note some of the plans for these investigations.

Additional Information

© 2012 Institute of Physics. Received 25 January 2012, in final form 29 February 2012. Published 1 June 2012. We thank Ilya Mandel for helpful discussions. We gratefully acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation under NSF grants PHY-1040231, PHY-0600953, PHY-0847611, AST-1028087, DRL-1136221, OCI-0832606, PHY-0903782, PHY-0929114, PHY-0969855, AST-1002667, PHY-0650377, PHY-0963136, PHY-0855315, PHY-0969111, PHY-1005426, PHY-0601459, PHY-1068881, PHY-1005655, PHY-0653550, PHY-0955773, PHY-0653443, PHY-0855892, PHY-0914553, PHY-0941417, PHY-0903973, PHY-0955825, NSF cooperative agreement PHY-0757058, by NASA grants 07-ATFP07-0158, NNX07AG96G, NNX10AI73G, NNX09AF96G, NNX09AF97G, by Marie Curie Grants of the 7th European Community Framework Programme FP7-PEOPLE-2011-CIGCBHEO number 293412, by the DyBHo-256667 ERC Starting grant, and MIRG-CT-2007-205005/PHY, and Science and Technology Facilities Council grants ST/H008438/1 and ST/I001085/1. Further funding was provided by the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, NSERC of Canada, the Canada Research Chairs Program, the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Govern de les Illes Balears, the Ramόn y Cajal Programme of the Ministry of Education and Science of Spain, contracts AYA2010-15709, CSD2007-00042, FIS2011-30145-C03-03, CSD2009-00064 and FPA2010-16495 of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, grant AGAUR-2009-SGR-935, the Royal Society, the German Research Foundation, grant SFB/Transregio 7, the German Aerospace Center for LISA Germany, and the Research Corporation for Science Advancement. Computations were carried out on Teragrid machines Lonestar, Ranger, Trestles and Kraken under Teragrid allocations TG-PHY060027N, TG-MCA99S008, TG-PHY090095, TG-PHY100051, TG-PHY990007N, TG-PHY090003 and TG-MCA08X009. Computations were also performed on the clusters "HLRB-2' at LRZ Munich, 'NewHorizons' at RIT (funded by NSF grant numbers AST- 1028087, DMS-0820923 and PHY-0722703), 'Zwicky' at Caltech (funded by NSFMRI award PHY-0960291), 'Finis Terrae' (funded by CESGA-ICTS-2010-200 and 221), 'Caesaraugusta' (funded by BSC grant numbers AECT-2011-2-0006, AECT-2011-3-0007, AECT-2012-1-0008), 'MareNostrum' (funded by BSC grant numbers AECT-2009-2-0017, AECT-2010-1-0008, AECT-2010-2-0013, AECT-2010-3-0010, AECT-2011-1-0015, AECT-2011-2-0012), 'VSC' in Vienna (funded by FWF grant P22498), 'Force' at GaTech, and on the GPC supercomputer at the SciNet HPC Consortium [137]; SciNet is funded by the Canada Foundation for Innovation under the auspices of Compute Canada; the Government of Ontario; Ontario Research Fund, Research Excellence; and the University of Toronto.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023