69 research outputs found
Colloquium: Comparison of Astrophysical and Terrestrial Frequency Standards
We have re-analyzed the stability of pulse arrival times from pulsars and
white dwarfs using several analysis tools for measuring the noise
characteristics of sampled time and frequency data. We show that the best
terrestrial artificial clocks substantially exceed the performance of
astronomical sources as time-keepers in terms of accuracy (as defined by cesium
primary frequency standards) and stability. This superiority in stability can
be directly demonstrated over time periods up to two years, where there is high
quality data for both. Beyond 2 years there is a deficiency of data for
clock/clock comparisons and both terrestrial and astronomical clocks show equal
performance being equally limited by the quality of the reference timescales
used to make the comparisons. Nonetheless, we show that detailed accuracy
evaluations of modern terrestrial clocks imply that these new clocks are likely
to have a stability better than any astronomical source up to comparison times
of at least hundreds of years. This article is intended to provide a correct
appreciation of the relative merits of natural and artificial clocks. The use
of natural clocks as tests of physics under the most extreme conditions is
entirely appropriate; however, the contention that these natural clocks,
particularly white dwarfs, can compete as timekeepers against devices
constructed by mankind is shown to be doubtful.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; presented at the International Frequency Control
Symposium, Newport Beach, Calif., June, 2010; presented at Pulsar Conference
2010, October 12th, Sardinia; accepted 13th September 2010 for publication in
Reviews of Modern Physic
Comparison of VLBI, TV and traveling clock techniques for time transfer
A three part experiment was conducted to develop and compare time transfer techniques. The experiment consisted of (1) a very long baseline interferometer (VLBI), (2) a high precision portable clock time transfer system between the two sites, and (3) a television time transfer. A comparison of the VLBI and traveling clock shows each technique can perform satisfactorily at the five nsec level. There was a systematic offset of 59 nsec between the two methods, which we attributed to a difference in epochs between VLBI formatter and station clock. The VLBI method had an internal random error of one nsec at the three sigma level for a two day period. Thus, the Mark II system performed well, and VLBI shows promise of being an accurate method of time transfer. The TV system, which had technical problems during the experiment, transferred time with a random error of about 50 nsec
Quasar Proper Motions and Low-Frequency Gravitational Waves
We report observational upper limits on the mass-energy of the cosmological
gravitational-wave background, from limits on proper motions of quasars.
Gravitational waves with periods longer than the time span of observations
produce a simple pattern of apparent proper motions over the sky, composed
primarily of second-order transverse vector spherical harmonics. A fit of such
harmonics to measured motions yields a 95%-confidence limit on the mass-energy
of gravitational waves with frequencies <2e-9 Hz, of <0.11/h*h times the
closure density of the universe.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure. Also available at
http://charm.physics.ucsb.edu:80/people/cgwinn/cgwinn_group/index.htm
Prospects for Detecting Dark Matter Halo Substructure with Pulsar Timing
One of the open questions of modern cosmology is the nature and properties of
the Dark Matter halo and its substructures. In this work we study the
gravitational effect of dark matter substructures on pulsar timing
observations. Since millisecond pulsars are stable and accurate emitters, they
have been proposed as plausible astrophysical tools to probe the gravitational
effects of dark matter structures. We study this effect on pulsar timing
through Shapiro time delay (or Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect) and Doppler
effects statistically, showing that the latter dominates the signal. For this
task, we relate the power spectrum of pulsar frequency change to the matter
power spectrum on small scales, which we compute using the stable clustering
hypothesis. We compare this power spectrum with the reach of current and future
observations of pulsar timing designed for gravitational wave (GW) detection.
Our results show that while current observations are unable to detect these
signals, the sensitivity of the upcoming Square Kilometer Array (SKA) is only a
factor of few weaker than our optimistic predictions.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. Final Versio
Status Update of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array
The Parkes Pulsar Timing Array project aims to make a direct detection of a
gravitational-wave background through timing of millisecond pulsars. In this
article, the main requirements for that endeavour are described and recent and
ongoing progress is outlined. We demonstrate that the timing properties of
millisecond pulsars are adequate and that technological progress is timely to
expect a successful detection of gravitational waves within a decade, or
alternatively to rule out all current predictions for gravitational wave
backgrounds formed by supermassive black-hole mergers.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, Amaldi 8 conference proceedings, accepted by
Classical & Quantum Gravit
Gravitational wave detection using pulsars: status of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array project
The first direct detection of gravitational waves may be made through
observations of pulsars. The principal aim of pulsar timing array projects
being carried out worldwide is to detect ultra-low frequency gravitational
waves (f ~ 10^-9 to 10^-8 Hz). Such waves are expected to be caused by
coalescing supermassive binary black holes in the cores of merged galaxies. It
is also possible that a detectable signal could have been produced in the
inflationary era or by cosmic strings. In this paper we review the current
status of the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array project (the only such project in the
Southern hemisphere) and compare the pulsar timing technique with other forms
of gravitational-wave detection such as ground- and space-based interferometer
systems.Comment: Accepted for publication in PAS
A precise mass measurement of the intermediate-mass binary pulsar PSR J1802-2124
PSR J1802-2124 is a 12.6-ms pulsar in a 16.8-hour binary orbit with a
relatively massive white dwarf (WD) companion. These properties make it a
member of the intermediate-mass class of binary pulsar (IMBP) systems. We have
been timing this pulsar since its discovery in 2002. Concentrated observations
at the Green Bank Telescope, augmented with data from the Parkes and Nancay
observatories, have allowed us to determine the general relativistic Shapiro
delay. This has yielded pulsar and white dwarf mass measurements of 1.24(11)
and 0.78(4) solar masses (68% confidence), respectively. The low mass of the
pulsar, the high mass of the WD companion, the short orbital period, and the
pulsar spin period may be explained by the system having gone through a
common-envelope phase in its evolution. We argue that selection effects may
contribute to the relatively small number of known IMBPs.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Timing stability of millisecond pulsars and prospects for gravitational-wave detection
Analysis of high-precision timing observations of an array of approx. 20
millisecond pulsars (a so-called "timing array") may ultimately result in the
detection of a stochastic gravitational-wave background. The feasibility of
such a detection and the required duration of this type of experiment are
determined by the achievable rms of the timing residuals and the timing
stability of the pulsars involved. We present results of the first long-term,
high-precision timing campaign on a large sample of millisecond pulsars used in
gravitational-wave detection projects. We show that the timing residuals of
most pulsars in our sample do not contain significant low-frequency noise that
could limit the use of these pulsars for decade-long gravitational-wave
detection efforts. For our most precisely timed pulsars, intrinsic
instabilities of the pulsars or the observing system are shown to contribute to
timing irregularities on a five-year timescale below the 100 ns level. Based on
those results, realistic sensitivity curves for planned and ongoing timing
array efforts are determined. We conclude that prospects for detection of a
gravitational-wave background through pulsar timing array efforts within five
years to a decade are good.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRA
Shapiro Effect as a Possible Cause of the Low-Frequency Pulsar Timing Noise in Globular Clusters
A prolonged timing of millisecond pulsars has revealed low-frequency
uncorrelated noise, presumably of astrophysical origin, in the pulse arrival
time (PAT) residuals for some of them. In most cases, pulsars in globular
clusters show a low-frequency modulation of their rotational phase and spin
rate. The relativistic time delay of the pulsar signal in the curved space time
of randomly distributed and moving globular cluster stars (the Shapiro effect)
is suggested as a possible cause of this modulation.
Given the smallness of the aberration corrections that arise from the
nonstationarity of the gravitational field of the randomly distributed ensemble
of stars under consideration, a formula is derived for the Shapiro effect for a
pulsar in a globular cluster. The derived formula is used to calculate the
autocorrelation function of the low-frequency pulsar noise, the slope of its
power spectrum, and the behavior of the statistic that characterizes
the spectral properties of this noise in the form of a time function. The
Shapiro effect under discussion is shown to manifest itself for large impact
parameters as a low-frequency noise of the pulsar spin rate with a spectral
index of n=-1.8 that depends weakly on the specific model distribution of stars
in the globular cluster. For small impact parameters, the spectral index of the
noise is n=-1.5.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
- …