Practical Methods for Continuous Gravitational Wave Detection using Pulsar Timing Data
J. A. Ellis, F. A. Jenet, M. A. McLaughlin

TL;DR
This paper develops and evaluates computationally feasible detection strategies for continuous gravitational waves in pulsar timing data, demonstrating that Earth-term-matched filters are highly sensitive and practical for future GW searches.
Contribution
It introduces efficient detection methods, including Earth-term-matched filters, for continuous GWs in pulsar timing data, balancing sensitivity and computational feasibility.
Findings
Earth-term-matched filter is highly sensitive and computationally feasible.
Optimal matched filter with pulsar distances is computationally infeasible.
Minimum detectable strain amplitude is approximately 2×10^{-15}.
Abstract
Gravitational Waves (GWs) are tiny ripples in the fabric of space-time predicted by Einstein's General Relativity. Pulsar timing arrays (PTAs) are well poised to detect low frequency ( -- Hz) GWs in the near future. There has been a significant amount of research into the detection of a stochastic background of GWs from supermassive black hole binaries (SMBHBs). Recent work has shown that single continuous sources standing out above the background may be detectable by PTAs operating at a sensitivity sufficient to detect the stochastic background. The most likely sources of continuous GWs in the pulsar timing frequency band are extremely massive and/or nearby SMBHBs. In this paper we present detection strategies including various forms of matched filtering and power spectral summing. We determine the efficacy and computational cost of such strategies. It is shown that…
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