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CCAPP Seminar - Antonella Palmese (Carnegie Mellon)

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March 14, 2023
12:00PM - 1:00PM
Virtual Only Zoom

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Add to Calendar 2023-03-14 12:00:00 2023-03-14 13:00:00 CCAPP Seminar - Antonella Palmese (Carnegie Mellon) Antonella Palmese Assistant Professor  | McWilliams Center for Cosmology Carnegie Mellon University Probing the Universe’s expansion and the origin of compact object binaries with multi-messenger astronomy  The synergy between gravitational wave (GW) experiments, such as LIGO/Virgo, and optical surveys, such as the Dark Energy Survey (DES), is prominent in the discovery of electromagnetic counterparts to GW events and the application of the standard siren method, which has already enabled several measurements of the Hubble Constant. Our DECam follow-up observations of the first binary neutron star merger detected by LIGO/Virgo enabled the discovery of the first optical counterpart to a GW event and the first standard siren measurement, while also providing information about the origin of the binary. We have later extended the standard siren analysis to compact object binary merger events without electromagnetic counterparts using galaxy catalogs, for which I will present the latest results. These measurements are a promising tool to shed light on the Hubble constant tension in the coming years. In the last part of the talk, I will present some interesting possibilities for the formation of the most massive binary black hole mergers detected so far which are related to galaxies’ central black holes, in particular those in dwarf galaxies and Active Galactic Nuclei. Virtual Only Zoom Center for Cosmology and AstroParticle Physics (CCAPP) ccapp@osu.edu America/New_York public

Antonella Palmese
Assistant Professor  | McWilliams Center for Cosmology
Carnegie Mellon University

Probing the Universe’s expansion and the origin of compact object binaries with multi-messenger astronomy 

The synergy between gravitational wave (GW) experiments, such as LIGO/Virgo, and optical surveys, such as the Dark Energy Survey (DES), is prominent in the discovery of electromagnetic counterparts to GW events and the application of the standard siren method, which has already enabled several measurements of the Hubble Constant. Our DECam follow-up observations of the first binary neutron star merger detected by LIGO/Virgo enabled the discovery of the first optical counterpart to a GW event and the first standard siren measurement, while also providing information about the origin of the binary. We have later extended the standard siren analysis to compact object binary merger events without electromagnetic counterparts using galaxy catalogs, for which I will present the latest results. These measurements are a promising tool to shed light on the Hubble constant tension in the coming years. In the last part of the talk, I will present some interesting possibilities for the formation of the most massive binary black hole mergers detected so far which are related to galaxies’ central black holes, in particular those in dwarf galaxies and Active Galactic Nuclei.

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