Detecting eccentric supermassive black hole binaries with pulsar timing arrays: Resolvable source strategies
S. R. Taylor, E. A. Huerta, J. R. Gair, S. T. McWilliams

TL;DR
This paper develops a Bayesian method and an extended $ ext{F}_e$-statistic to detect and analyze eccentric supermassive black hole binaries using pulsar timing arrays, enabling insights into their environments.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized Bayesian pipeline and $ ext{F}_e$-statistic for eccentric binaries, improving detection and parameter estimation in pulsar timing array data.
Findings
The methods are robust for circular and eccentric systems.
Eccentricity affects detection sensitivity and signal interpretation.
Using circular templates on eccentric signals reduces detection efficiency.
Abstract
The couplings between supermassive black-hole binaries and their environments within galactic nuclei have been well studied as part of the search for solutions to the final parsec problem. The scattering of stars by the binary or the interaction with a circumbinary disk may efficiently drive the system to sub-parsec separations, allowing the binary to enter a regime where the emission of gravitational waves can drive it to merger within a Hubble time. However, these interactions can also affect the orbital parameters of the binary. In particular, they may drive an increase in binary eccentricity which survives until the system's gravitational-wave signal enters the pulsar-timing array band. Therefore, if we can measure the eccentricity from observed signals, we can potentially deduce some of the properties of the binary environment. To this end, we build on previous techniques to…
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