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Limits on the Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background from the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves

Authors :
Zaven Arzoumanian
Andrea N. Lommen
Joseph K. Swiggum
Paul Demorest
Scott M. Ransom
S. Giampanis
S. J. Chamberlin
David J. Nice
V. M. Kaspi
Sarah Burke-Spolaor
A. Brazier
Fredrick A. Jenet
Joseph Lazio
J. M. Cordes
Nipuni Palliyaguru
Ryan Shannon
Paulo C. C. Freire
Ingrid H. Stairs
X. Siemens
Marjorie Gonzalez
Robert D. Ferdman
Justin A. Ellis
Lee Samuel Finn
Maura McLaughlin
Daniel R. Stinebring
Delphine Perrodin
Weiwei Zhu
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
arXiv, 2012.

Abstract

We present an analysis of high-precision pulsar timing data taken as part of the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational waves (NANOGrav) project. We have observed 17 pulsars for a span of roughly five years using the Green Bank and Arecibo radio telescopes. We analyze these data using standard pulsar timing models, with the addition of time-variable dispersion measure and frequency-variable pulse shape terms. Sub-microsecond timing residuals are obtained in nearly all cases, and the best root-mean-square timing residuals in this set are ~30-50 ns. We present methods for analyzing post-fit timing residuals for the presence of a gravitational wave signal with a specified spectral shape. These optimally take into account the timing fluctuation power removed by the model fit, and can be applied to either data from a single pulsar, or to a set of pulsars to detect a correlated signal. We apply these methods to our dataset to set an upper limit on the strength of the nHz-frequency stochastic supermassive black hole gravitational wave background of h_c (1 yr^-1) < 7x10^-15 (95%). This result is dominated by the timing of the two best pulsars in the set, PSRs J1713+0747 and J1909-3744.<br />To be submitted to ApJ

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....223fe9c5d6c12d7b3f82c7c5e9254b71
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1201.6641