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The NANOGrav 12.5 yr Data Set: Observations and Narrowband Timing of 47 Millisecond Pulsars

Authors :
Benjamin M. X. Nguyen
Yhamil Garcia
Jordan A. Gusdorff
Paul R. Brook
Chiara M. F. Mingarelli
Rachel L. Chamberlain
Paul Demorest
Scott M. Ransom
Fronefield Crawford
Timothy Dolch
Stephen Taylor
Luke Zoltan Kelley
Sarah Burke-Spolaor
Joshua Ramette
Shami Chatterjee
Kevin Stovall
Elizabeth C. Ferrara
Robert D. Ferdman
Nathan Garver-Daniels
William Fiore
Peter A. Gentile
T. Joseph W. Lazio
Harsha Blumer
Cody Jessup
Kaleb Maraccini
Caitlin A. Witt
Joseph K. Swiggum
David L. Kaplan
Daniel Halmrast
Paul S. Ray
H. Thankful Cromartie
Brent J. Shapiro-Albert
James M. Cordes
D. R. Madison
Cherry Ng
Daniel R. Stinebring
Sarah J. Vigeland
Joseph Simon
Renée Spiewak
Deborah C. Good
Xavier Siemens
Faisal Alam
Keith E. Bohler
Michael T. Lam
Ryan S. Lynch
Ingrid H. Stairs
Megan E. Decesar
Justin A. Ellis
Emmanuel Fonseca
Maura McLaughlin
Keeisi Caballero
Weiwei Zhu
Joey Shapiro Key
David J. Nice
Timothy T. Pennucci
Duncan R. Lorimer
Paul T. Baker
Richard Camuccio
Neil J. Cornish
Ross J. Jennings
Jing Luo
Andrew R. Kaiser
Megan L. Jones
K. Islo
Jeffrey S. Hazboun
Nihan Pol
Michael Tripepi
Adam Brazier
Zaven Arzoumanian
Michele Vallisneri
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
arXiv, 2020.

Abstract

We present time-of-arrival (TOA) measurements and timing models of 47 millisecond pulsars (MSPs) observed from 2004 to 2017 at the Arecibo Observatory and the Green Bank Telescope by the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav). The observing cadence was three to four weeks for most pulsars over most of this time span, with weekly observations of six sources. These data were collected for use in low-frequency gravitational wave searches and for other astrophysical purposes. We detail our observational methods and present a set of TOA measurements, based on "narrowband" analysis, in which many TOAs are calculated within narrow radio-frequency bands for data collected simultaneously across a wide bandwidth. A separate set of "wideband" TOAs will be presented in a companion paper. We detail a number of methodological changes compared to our previous work which yield a cleaner and more uniformly processed data set. Our timing models include several new astrometric and binary pulsar measurements, including previously unpublished values for the parallaxes of PSRs J1832-0836 and J2322+2057, the secular derivatives of the projected semi-major orbital axes of PSRs J0613-0200 and J2229+2643, and the first detection of the Shapiro delay in PSR J2145-0750. We report detectable levels of red noise in the time series for 14 pulsars. As a check on timing model reliability, we investigate the stability of astrometric parameters across data sets of different lengths. We report flux density measurements for all pulsars observed. Searches for stochastic and continuous gravitational waves using these data will be subjects of forthcoming publications.<br />Comment: 54 pages, 52 figures, 7 tables, 1 appendix. Data are available at http://nanograv.org/data/ and via the DOI 10.5281/zenodo.4312297

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fcd54bc007fa6cfae893c8f98c5c828
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2005.06490