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The detection of an intermediate-mass black hole population ($10^2-10^6 M_odot$) will provide clues to their formation environments (e.g., disks of active galactic nuclei, globular clusters) and illuminate a potential pathway to produce supermassive black holes. Ground-based gravitational-wave detectors are sensitive to a subset of such mergers and have been used to detect one $142^{+28}_{-16} M_odot$ intermediate-mass black hole formation event. However, ground-based detector data contain numerous incoherent short duration noise transients that can mimic the gravitational-wave signals from merging intermediate-mass black holes, limiting the sensitivity of searches. Here we search for binary black hole mergers using a Bayesian-inspired ranking statistic which measures the coherence or incoherence of triggers in multiple-detector data. We use this statistic to identify candidate events with lab-frame total masses $gtrsim55 M_odot$ using data from LIGOs second observing run. Our analysis does not yield evidence for new intermediate-mass black holes. However, we find support for some stellar-mass binary black holes not reported in the first LIGO--Virgo gravitational-wave transient catalog, GWTC-1.
We investigate the potential of ground-based gravitational-wave detectors to probe the mass function of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) wherein we also include BHs in the upper mass gap $sim 60-130~M_odot$. Using the noise spectral density of t
This paper reports on an unmodeled, all-sky search for gravitational waves from merging intermediate mass black hole binaries (IMBHB). The search was performed on data from the second joint science run of the LIGO and Virgo detectors (July 2009 - Oct
Gravitational wave astronomy has been firmly established with the detection of gravitational waves from the merger of ten stellar mass binary black holes and a neutron star binary. This paper reports on the all-sky search for gravitational waves from
During their first observational run, the two Advanced LIGO detectors attained an unprecedented sensitivity, resulting in the first direct detections of gravitational-wave signals and GW151226, produced by stellar-mass binary black hole systems. This
The first observational run of the Advanced LIGO detectors, from September 12, 2015 to January 19, 2016, saw the first detections of gravitational waves from binary black hole mergers. In this paper we present full results from a search for binary bl