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We report results of a wideband search for periodic gravitational waves from isolated neutron stars within the Orion spur towards both the inner and outer regions of our Galaxy. As gravitational waves interact very weakly with matter, the search is unimpeded by dust and concentrations of stars. One search disk (A) is $6.87^circ$ in diameter and centered on $20^textrm{h}10^textrm{m}54.71^textrm{s}+33^circ3325.29$, and the other (B) is $7.45^circ$ in diameter and centered on $8^textrm{h}35^textrm{m}20.61^textrm{s}-46^circ4925.151$. We explored the frequency range of 50-1500 Hz and frequency derivative from $0$ to $-5times 10^{-9}$ Hz/s. A multi-stage, loosely coherent search program allowed probing more deeply than before in these two regions, while increasing coherence length with every stage. Rigorous followup parameters have winnowed initial coincidence set to only 70 candidates, to be examined manually. None of those 70 candidates proved to be consistent with an isolated gravitational wave emitter, and 95% confidence level upper limits were placed on continuous-wave strain amplitudes. Near $169$ Hz we achieve our lowest 95% CL upper limit on worst-case linearly polarized strain amplitude $h_0$ of $6.3times 10^{-25}$, while at the high end of our frequency range we achieve a worst-case upper limit of $3.4times 10^{-24}$ for all polarizations and sky locations.
We report results of a search for continuous gravitational waves from a region covering the globular cluster Terzan 5 and the galactic center. Continuous gravitational waves are expected from fast-spinning, slightly non-axisymmetric isolated neutron
We report on an all-sky search for periodic gravitational waves in the frequency range $mathrm{50-1000 Hz}$ with the first derivative of frequency in the range $-8.9 times 10^{-10}$ Hz/s to zero in two years of data collected during LIGOs fifth scien
We report on an all-sky search for continuous gravitational waves in the frequency band 20-2000,Hz and with a frequency time derivative in the range of $[-1.0, +0.1]times10^{-8}$,Hz/s. Such a signal could be produced by a nearby, spinning and slightl
We present the results of a directed search for continuous gravitational waves from unknown, isolated neutron stars in the Galactic Center region, performed on two years of data from LIGOs fifth science run from two LIGO detectors. The search uses a
We present results of a search for periodic gravitational wave signals with frequency between 20 and 400 Hz, from the neutron star in the supernova remnant G347.3-0.5, using LIGO O2 public data. The search is deployed on the volunteer computing proje