Searches for continuous gravitational waves target nearly monochromatic gravitational wave emission from, e.g., nonaxisymmetric fast-spinning neutron stars. Broad surveys often require us to explicitly search for a very large number of different waveforms, easily exceeding ∼1017 templates. In such cases, for practical reasons, only the top, say ∼1010, results are saved and followed up through a hierarchy of stages. Most of these candidates are not completely independent of neighboring ones, but arise due to some common cause: a fluctuation, a signal, or a disturbance. By judiciously clustering together candidates stemming from the same root cause, the subsequent follow-ups become more effective. A number of clustering algorithms have been employed in past searches based on iteratively finding symmetric and compact overdensities around candidates with high detection statistic values. The new clustering method presented in this paper is a significant improvement over previous methods: it is agnostic about the shape of the overdensities, is very efficient and it is effective: at a very high detection efficiency, it has a noise rejection of 99.99%, is capable of clustering two orders of magnitude more candidates than attainable before and, at fixed sensitivity it enables more than a factor of 30 faster follow-ups. We also demonstrate how to optimally choose the clustering parameters.
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