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Common-red-signal analysis with 24-yr high-precision timing of the European Pulsar Timing Array: Inferences in the stochastic gravitational-wave background search

Authors :
Chen, S.
Caballero, R. N.
Guo, Y. J.
Chalumeau, A.
Liu, K.
Shaifullah, G.
Lee, K. J.
Babak, S.
Desvignes, G.
Parthasarathy, A.
Hu, H.
van der Wateren, E.
Antoniadis, J.
Nielsen, A. -S. Bak
Bassa, C. G.
Berthereau, A.
Burgay, M.
Champion, D. J.
Cognard, I.
Falxa, M.
Ferdman, R. D.
Freire, P. C. C.
Gair, J. R.
Graikou, E.
Guillemot, L.
Jang, J.
Janssen, G. H.
Karuppusamy, R.
Keith, M. J.
Kramer, M.
Liu, X. J.
Lyne, A. G.
Main, R. A.
McKee, J. W.
Mickaliger, M. B.
Perera, B. B. P.
Perrodin, D.
Petiteau, A.
Porayko, N. K.
Possenti, A.
Samajdar, A.
Sanidas, S. A.
Sesana, A.
Speri, L.
Stappers, B. W.
Theureau, G.
Tiburzi, C.
Vecchio, A.
Verbiest, J. P. W.
Wang, J.
Wang, L.
Xu, H.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We present results from the search for a stochastic gravitational-wave background (GWB) as predicted by the theory of General Relativity using six radio millisecond pulsars from the Data Release 2 (DR2) of the European Pulsar Timing Array (EPTA) covering a timespan up to 24 years. A GWB manifests itself as a long-term low-frequency stochastic signal common to all pulsars, a common red signal (CRS), with the characteristic Hellings-Downs (HD) spatial correlation. Our analysis is performed with two independent pipelines, \eprise{} and \tn{}+\ftwo{}, which produce consistent results. A search for a CRS with simultaneous estimation of its spatial correlations yields spectral properties compatible with theoretical GWB predictions, but does not result in the required measurement of the HD correlation, as required for GWB detection. Further Bayesian model comparison between different types of CRSs, including a GWB, finds the most favoured model to be the common uncorrelated red noise described by a power-law with $A = 5.13_{-2.73}^{+4.20} \times 10^{-15}$ and $\gamma = 3.78_{-0.59}^{+0.69}$ (95\% credible regions). Fixing the spectral index to $\gamma=13/3$ as expected from the GWB by circular, inspiralling supermassive black-hole binaries results in an amplitude of $A =2.95_{-0.72}^{+0.89} \times 10^{-15}$. We implement three different models, BAYESEPHEM, LINIMOSS and EPHEMGP, to address possible Solar-system ephemeris (SSE) systematics and conclude that our results may only marginally depend on these effects. This work builds on the methods and models from the studies on the EPTA DR1. We show that under the same analysis framework the results remain consistent after the data set extension.<br />Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, 7 tables, 2 appendix tables and 1 appendix figure

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2110.13184
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab2833