The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2023)

Search for an Isotropic Gravitational-wave Background with the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array

  • Daniel J. Reardon,
  • Andrew Zic,
  • Ryan M. Shannon,
  • George B. Hobbs,
  • Matthew Bailes,
  • Valentina Di Marco,
  • Agastya Kapur,
  • Axl F. Rogers,
  • Eric Thrane,
  • Jacob Askew,
  • N. D. Ramesh Bhat,
  • Andrew Cameron,
  • Małgorzata Curyło,
  • William A. Coles,
  • Shi Dai,
  • Boris Goncharov,
  • Matthew Kerr,
  • Atharva Kulkarni,
  • Yuri Levin,
  • Marcus E. Lower,
  • Richard N. Manchester,
  • Rami Mandow,
  • Matthew T. Miles,
  • Rowina S. Nathan,
  • Stefan Osłowski,
  • Christopher J. Russell,
  • Renée Spiewak,
  • Songbo Zhang,
  • Xing-Jiang Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acdd02
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 951, no. 1
p. L6

Abstract

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Pulsar timing arrays aim to detect nanohertz-frequency gravitational waves (GWs). A background of GWs modulates pulsar arrival times and manifests as a stochastic process, common to all pulsars, with a signature spatial correlation. Here we describe a search for an isotropic stochastic gravitational-wave background (GWB) using observations of 30 millisecond pulsars from the third data release of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array (PPTA), which spans 18 yr. Using current Bayesian inference techniques we recover and characterize a common-spectrum noise process. Represented as a strain spectrum ${h}_{c}=A{(f/1{\mathrm{yr}}^{-1})}^{\alpha }$ , we measure $A={3.1}_{-0.9}^{+1.3}\times {10}^{-15}$ and α = −0.45 ± 0.20, respectively (median and 68% credible interval). For a spectral index of α = −2/3, corresponding to an isotropic background of GWs radiated by inspiraling supermassive black hole binaries, we recover an amplitude of $A={2.04}_{-0.22}^{+0.25}\times {10}^{-15}$ . However, we demonstrate that the apparent signal strength is time-dependent, as the first half of our data set can be used to place an upper limit on A that is in tension with the inferred common-spectrum amplitude using the complete data set. We search for spatial correlations in the observations by hierarchically analyzing individual pulsar pairs, which also allows for significance validation through randomizing pulsar positions on the sky. For a process with α = −2/3, we measure spatial correlations consistent with a GWB, with an estimated false-alarm probability of p ≲ 0.02 (approx. 2 σ ). The long timing baselines of the PPTA and the access to southern pulsars will continue to play an important role in the International Pulsar Timing Array.

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