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The NANOGrav 12.5-year Data Set: Bayesian Limits on Gravitational Waves from Individual Supermassive Black Hole Binaries

Authors :
Arzoumanian, Zaven
Baker, Paul T.
Blecha, Laura
Blumer, Harsha
Brazier, Adam
Brook, Paul R.
Burke-Spolaor, Sarah
Bécsy, Bence
Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew
Charisi, Maria
Chatterjee, Shami
Chen, Siyuan
Cordes, James M.
Cornish, Neil J.
Crawford, Fronefield
Cromartie, H. Thankful
DeCesar, Megan E.
Demorest, Paul B.
Dolch, Timothy
Drachler, Brendan
Ellis, Justin A.
Ferrara, E. C.
Fiore, William
Fonseca, Emmanuel
Freedman, Gabriel E.
Garver-Daniels, Nathan
Gentile, Peter A.
Glaser, Joseph
Good, Deborah C.
Gültekin, Kayhan
Hazboun, Jeffrey S.
Jennings, Ross J.
Johnson, Aaron D.
Jones, Megan L.
Kaiser, Andrew R.
Kaplan, David L.
Kelley, Luke Zoltan
Key, Joey Shapiro
Laal, Nima
Lam, Michael T.
Lamb, William G
Lazio, T. Joseph W.
Lewandowska, Natalia
Liu, Tingting
Lorimer, Duncan R.
Luo, Jing
Lynch, Ryan S.
Madison, Dustin R.
McEwen, Alexander
McLaughlin, Maura A.
Mingarelli, Chiara M. F.
Ng, Cherry
Nice, David J.
Ocker, Stella Koch
Olum, Ken D.
Pennucci, Timothy T.
Pol, Nihan S.
Ransom, Scott M.
Ray, Paul S.
Romano, Joseph D.
Shapiro-Albert, Brent J.
Siemens, Xavier
Simon, Joseph
Siwek, Magdalena
Spiewak, Renée
Stairs, Ingrid H.
Stinebring, Daniel R.
Stovall, Kevin
Swiggum, Joseph K.
Sydnor, Jessica
Taylor, Stephen R.
Turner, Jacob E.
Vallisneri, Michele
Vigeland, Sarah J.
Wahl, Haley M.
Walsh, Gregory
Witt, Caitlin A.
Young, Olivia
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Pulsar timing array collaborations, such as the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav), are seeking to detect nanohertz gravitational waves emitted by supermassive black hole binaries formed in the aftermath of galaxy mergers. We have searched for continuous waves from individual circular supermassive black hole binaries using the NANOGrav's recent 12.5-year data set. We created new methods to accurately model the uncertainties on pulsar distances in our analysis, and we implemented new techniques to account for a common red noise process in pulsar timing array data sets while searching for deterministic gravitational wave signals, including continuous waves. As we found no evidence for continuous waves in our data, we placed 95\% upper limits on the strain amplitude of continuous waves emitted by these sources. At our most sensitive frequency of 7.65 nanohertz, we placed a sky-averaged limit of $h_0 < $ $(6.82 \pm 0.35) \times 10^{-15}$, and $h_0 <$ $(2.66 \pm 0.15) \times 10^{-15}$ in our most sensitive sky location. Finally, we placed a multi-messenger limit of $\mathcal{M} <$ $(1.41 \pm 0.02) \times 10^9 M_\odot$ on the chirp mass of the supermassive black hole binary candidate 3C~66B.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures. Accepted by ApJL

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2301.03608
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acdbc7