Gravitational Wave Orchestra

Europe/Brussels
Place croix du Sud, SUD-19 (Université catholique de Louvain)

Place croix du Sud, SUD-19

Université catholique de Louvain


Louvain-la-Neuve, B-1348.
Description

A stochastic gravitational-wave background is the persistent signal that comes from overlapping, unresolved independent sources. These signals are individually undetectable, but detectable as a collectivity via their common influence on multiple detectors - the musical companion to the binary black hole or binary neutron star soloist. This hum will provide insights into our universe’s early history, allowing us to listen to the first-ever song of the universe in multiple frequency bands. The Gravitational Wave Orchestra 2022 will act as the ideal backdrop to listen to the various aspects of the gravitational-wave symphony.

During this two-day workshop (in-person), we will hear from:

  • Joseph Romano (TTU, Lubbock)

  • Irina Dvorkin (IAP, Paris)

  • Vuk Mandic (UMN, Minnesota)

  • Chiara Caprini (U. Geneva & CERN)

  • Stephen Taylor (Vanderbilt U., Nashville)

  • Giulia Cusin (U. Geneva & IAP, Paris)

  • Sanjit Mitra (IUCAA, Pune)

  • Tania Regimbau (LAPP, Annecy)

  • Carlo Contaldi (Imperial College, London)

  • Sébastien Clesse (ULB, Brussels)

  • Josquin Errard (APC, Paris)

  • Boris Goncharov (GSSI, L’Aquila) 

  • Guillaume Boileau (U. Antwerpen)

  • Aditya Parthasarathy (MPIfR, Bonn)

  • Alex Jenkins (UCL, London)

  • Kamiel Janssens (U. Antwerpen & ARTEMIS, Nice)

on a broad range of topics including:

  • Review on stochastic gravitational-wave backgrounds.
  • Theoretical development in stochastic gravitational-wave background modelling.
  • Most updated results from the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration and Pulsar Timing Arrays.
  • Future probes and strategies using: Einstein Telescope, Cosmic Explorer, and LISA.

Along with this, we will have a poster session and lightning talks. You are strongly encouraged to submit a poster abstract on stochastic gravitational-wave background-related research. Details can be found on the abstract submission page.

Registration and abstract submission deadline: August 05, 2022
Registration and abstract submission deadline (extended): August 12, 2022

Registration and abstract submission: Closed. 
Contact the organizers for any additional queries!



Organizing Committee: 

  • Jishnu Suresh, Federico De Lillo
    Antoine Depasse, Giacomo Bruno

Organizing Secretary:

  • Carinne Mertens
     

This program is supported by:


Participants
  • Aaqid Bhat
  • Aditya Parthasarathy
  • Adrian Macquet
  • Alba Romero-Rodríguez
  • Alberto Mariotti
  • Alex Jenkins
  • Alexander Sevrin
  • Ameek Malhotra
  • Andre Fuzfa
  • Andrea Campoleoni
  • Anirban Ain
  • Antoine Depasse
  • Archisman Ghosh
  • Aäron Rase
  • Boris Goncharov
  • Bruce Allen
  • Carinne Mertens
  • Carlo Contaldi
  • Carole Perigois
  • Charles Modera
  • Chiara Caprini
  • Christophe Ringeval
  • Clemente Smarra
  • Deepali Agarwal
  • Deeshani Mitra
  • Disrael Cunha
  • Eleni Bagui
  • Federico De Lillo
  • Giacomo Bruno
  • Giorgio Mentasti
  • Giulia Capurri
  • Giulia Cusin
  • Guillaume Boileau
  • Hannah Duval
  • He Wang
  • Hongbo Li
  • Ioanna Stamou
  • Irina Dvorkin
  • Jaikhomba Singha
  • Jessica Lawrence
  • Jesus Torrado Cacho
  • Jishnu Suresh
  • Joseph Romano
  • Josquin Errard
  • Kamiel Janssens
  • Kevin Turbang
  • Laxmipriya Pati
  • Leo Tsukada
  • Lorenzo Valbusa Dall'Armi
  • Léonard Lehoucq
  • Neha Singh
  • Nick van Remortel
  • Nilanjandev Bhaumik
  • Pierre Auclair
  • Rafael Robson Lino dos Santos
  • Rahul Musale
  • Sanjay Mandal
  • Sanjit Mitra
  • Santosh Lohakare
  • Sarah Farzand
  • Sebastien Clesse
  • Simon Maenaut
  • Simone Blasi
  • Simran Arora
  • Sofia Canevarolo
  • Stavros Venikoudis
  • Stephen Taylor
  • Subhajit Dandapat
  • Tania Regimbau
  • Tjonnie Li
  • Vuk Mandic
  • Thursday, 8 September
    • Welcome and registration
    • Day 1 - Morning session: 1
      • 1
        Intro & Welcome
      • 2
        Joseph Romano - Searching for Stochastic Gravitational-Wave Backgrounds across the gravitational-wave spectrum
      • 3
        Lighting Talks
    • 10:45
      Coffee Break
    • Day 1 - Morning session: 2
      • 4
        Irina Dvorkin - Stochastic gravitational-wave background from astrophysical sources
      • 5
        Chiara Caprini -Theory of SGWB from Cosmology perspective
    • 12:45
      Lunch Break + Poster
    • Day 1 - Afternoon session: 1
      • 6
        Vuk Mandic - Searching for the Stochastic Gravitational-Wave Background with Terrestrial Detectors
      • 7
        Stephen Taylor - NANOGrav Searches for the Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background: Near-future Prospects & Milestones
    • 16:00
      Coffee Break + Group Photo
    • Day 1 - Afternoon session: 2
      • 8
        Aditya Parthasarathy - A gamma-ray pulsar timing array constrains the nanohertz gravitational wave background
      • 9
        Boris Goncharov - Common-spectrum process in the search for nanohertz gravitational-wave background with the PPTA
      • 10
        Kamiel Janssens - Correlated noise and how it can disturb us listening to the symphony of the universe
    • Discussion
    • Social Dinner
  • Friday, 9 September
    • Day 2 - Morning session: 1
      • 11
        Giulia Cusin - Anisotropies of the Stochastic gravitational-wave background: theoretical modeling and detection prospects
      • 12
        Sanjit Mitra - Mapping the anisotropic Stochastic Gravitational-Wave Background
    • 10:45
      Coffee Break
    • Day 2 - Morning session: 2
      • 13
        Tania Regimbau - Is it still interesting to look at the gravitational-wave background with NG detectors
      • 14
        Carlo Contaldi - Stochastic gravitational-wave backgrounds with LISA and beyond: Challenges and future prospects
    • 12:45
      Lunch Break + Poster
    • Day 2 - Afternoon session: 1
      • 15
        Guillaume Boileau - Spectral separation of the cosmological SGWB for LISA in context of galactic and astrophysical background
      • 16
        Alexander Jenkins - Bridging the μHz gap in the gravitational-wave landscape with binary resonance
      • 17
        Sebastien Clesse - Popcorn in the sky: how to distinguish the gravitational-wave background from primordial black holes?
    • 15:45
      Coffee Break
    • Day 2 - Afternoon session: 2
      • 18
        Josquin Errard - Upcoming observations of the primordial, polarized Cosmic Microwave Background with the Simons Observatory: expected science and challenges
      • 19
        Poster award(s)
    • Discussion
    • Conclusions and remarks