European Pulsar Timing Array Limits on Continuous Gravitational Waves from Individual Supermassive Black Hole Binaries
Stanislav Babak, Antoine Petiteau, Alberto Sesana, Patrick Brem, Pablo, A. Rosado, Stephen R. Taylor, Antoine Lassus, Jason W.T. Hessels, Cees G., Bassa, Marta Burgay, R. Nicolas Caballero, David J. Champion, Ismael Cognard,, Gregory Desvignes, Jonathan R. Gair, Lucas Guillemot

TL;DR
This paper reports a search for continuous gravitational waves from supermassive black hole binaries using the European Pulsar Timing Array, setting new upper limits and constraining the population of such binaries.
Contribution
Developed new detection algorithms and provided the most stringent upper limits to date on gravitational waves from SMBHBs at nanohertz frequencies.
Findings
No evidence of CGW signals was found.
Upper limits on strain amplitude range from 6×10⁻¹⁵ to 1.5×10⁻¹⁴.
Constraints exclude certain SMBHB populations within 25 Mpc to 1 Gpc.
Abstract
We have searched for continuous gravitational wave (CGW) signals produced by individually resolvable, circular supermassive black hole binaries (SMBHBs) in the latest EPTA dataset, which consists of ultra-precise timing data on 41 millisecond pulsars. We develop frequentist and Bayesian detection algorithms to search both for monochromatic and frequency-evolving systems. None of the adopted algorithms show evidence for the presence of such a CGW signal, indicating that the data are best described by pulsar and radiometer noise only. Depending on the adopted detection algorithm, the 95\% upper limit on the sky-averaged strain amplitude lies in the range at . This limit varies by a factor of five, depending on the assumed source position, and the most constraining limit is achieved towards the positions of the most sensitive…
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