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Published May 21, 2015 | Published + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Pulsar timing noise and the minimum observation time to detect gravitational waves with pulsar timing arrays

Abstract

The sensitivity of pulsar timing arrays to gravitational waves is, at some level, limited by timing noise. Red timing noise – the stochastic wandering of pulse arrival times with a red spectrum – is prevalent in slow-spinning pulsars and has been identified in many millisecond pulsars. Phenomenological models of timing noise, such as from superfluid turbulence, suggest that the timing noise spectrum plateaus below some critical frequency, f_c, potentially aiding the hunt for gravitational waves. We examine this effect for individual pulsars by calculating minimum observation times, T_(min)(f_c), over which the gravitational wave signal becomes larger than the timing noise plateau. We do this in two ways: (1) in a model-independent manner, and (2) by using the superfluid turbulence model for timing noise as an example to illustrate how neutron star parameters can be constrained. We show that the superfluid turbulence model can reproduce the data qualitatively from a number of pulsars observed as part of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array. We further show how a value of f_c, derived either through observations or theory, can be related to T_(min). This provides a diagnostic whereby the usefulness of timing array pulsars for gravitational-wave detection can be quantified.

Additional Information

© 2015 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. Accepted 2015 March 9. Received 2015 February 14; in original form 2014 December 7. We are grateful to the anonymous reviewer for the thoughtful and thorough review of the manuscript. PDL and AM are supported by Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Project DP110103347. PDL is also supported by ARC DP140102578. VR is a recipient of a John Stocker Postgraduate Scholarship from the Science and Industry Endowment Fund. We thank Yuri Levin for comments on the manuscript and Ryan Shannon for comments on an earlier version. Calculations of the cosmic string stochastic background used the GWPlotter website: http://homepages.spa.umn.edu/∼gwplotter.

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Accepted Version - 1503.03298.pdf

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August 20, 2023
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