SIMBAD references

2023ApJ...951L..50A - Astrophys. J., 951, L50 (2023/July-2)

The NANOGrav 15 yr Data Set: Bayesian Limits on Gravitational Waves from Individual Supermassive Black Hole Binaries.

AGAZIE G., ANUMARLAPUDI A., ARCHIBALD A.M., ARZOUMANIAN Z., BAKER P.T., BECSY B., BLECHA L., BRAZIER A., BROOK P.R., BURKE-SPOLAOR S., CASE R., CASEY-CLYDE J.A., CHARISI M., CHATTERJEE S., COHEN T., CORDES J.M., CORNISH N.J., CRAWFORD F., CROMARTIE H.T., CROWTER K., DECESAR M.E., DEMOREST P.B., DIGMAN M.C., DOLCH T., DRACHLER B., FERRARA E.C., FIORE W., FONSECA E., FREEDMAN G.E., GARVER-DANIELS N., GENTILE P.A., GLASER J., GOOD D.C., GULTEKIN K., HAZBOUN J.S., HOURIHANE S., JENNINGS R.J., JOHNSON A.D., JONES M.L., KAISER A.R., KAPLAN D.L., KELLEY L.Z., KERR M., KEY J.S., LAAL N., LAM M.T., LAMB W.G., LAZIO T.J.W., LEWANDOWSKA N., LIU T., LORIMER D.R., LUO J., LYNCH R.S., MA C.-P., MADISON D.R., McEWEN A., McKEE J.W., McLAUGHLIN M.A., McMANN N., MEYERS B.W., MEYERS P.M., MINGARELLI C.M.F., MITRIDATE A., NG C., NICE D.J., OCKER S.K., OLUM K.D., PENNUCCI T.T., PERERA B.B.P., PETROV P., POL N.S., RADOVAN H.A., RANSOM S.M., RAY P.S., ROMANO J.D., SARDESAI S.C., SCHMIEDEKAMP A., SCHMIEDEKAMP C., SCHMITZ K., SHAPIRO-ALBERT B.J., SIEMENS X., SIMON J., SIWEK M.S., STAIRS I.H., STINEBRING D.R., STOVALL K., SUSOBHANAN A., SWIGGUM J.K., TAYLOR J., TAYLOR S.R., TURNER J.E., UNAL C., VALLISNERI M., VAN HAASTEREN R., VIGELAND S.J., WAHL H.M., WITT C.A., YOUNG O. (The NANOGrav Collaboration)

Abstract (from CDS):

Evidence for a low-frequency stochastic gravitational-wave background has recently been reported based on analyses of pulsar timing array data. The most likely source of such a background is a population of supermassive black hole binaries, the loudest of which may be individually detected in these data sets. Here we present the search for individual supermassive black hole binaries in the NANOGrav 15 yr data set. We introduce several new techniques, which enhance the efficiency and modeling accuracy of the analysis. The search uncovered weak evidence for two candidate signals, one with a gravitational-wave frequency of ∼4 nHz, and another at ∼170 nHz. The significance of the low-frequency candidate was greatly diminished when Hellings-Downs correlations were included in the background model. The high-frequency candidate was discounted due to the lack of a plausible host galaxy, the unlikely astrophysical prior odds of finding such a source, and since most of its support comes from a single pulsar with a commensurate binary period. Finding no compelling evidence for signals from individual binary systems, we place upper limits on the strain amplitude of gravitational waves emitted by such systems. At our most sensitive frequency of 6 nHz, we place a sky-averaged 95% upper limit of 8 × 10–15 on the strain amplitude. We also calculate an exclusion volume and a corresponding effective radius, within which we can rule out the presence of black hole binaries emitting at a given frequency.

Abstract Copyright: © 2023. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Journal keyword(s): Gravitational wave astronomy

Simbad objects: 72

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2023ApJ...951L..50A and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu