Single Sources in the Low-Frequency Gravitational Wave Sky: properties and time to detection by pulsar timing arrays
Luke Zoltan Kelley, Laura Blecha, Lars Hernquist, Alberto Sesana,, Stephen R. Taylor

TL;DR
This study predicts that individual low-frequency gravitational wave sources are likely detectable by pulsar timing arrays within about 20 years, with detection prospects influenced more by red noise than binary evolution details.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive simulation-based analysis of the detection prospects for single GW sources using realistic galaxy and black hole populations, considering various noise models.
Findings
Single sources are at least as detectable as the stochastic background.
Detection of single sources is likely within ~20 years of observation.
Red noise significantly delays detection times, more so than binary evolution parameters.
Abstract
We calculate the properties, occurrence rates and detection prospects of individually resolvable 'single sources' in the low frequency gravitational wave (GW) spectrum. Our simulations use the population of galaxies and massive black hole binaries from the Illustris cosmological hydrodynamic simulations, coupled to comprehensive semi-analytic models of the binary merger process. Using mock pulsar timing arrays (PTA) with, for the first time, varying red-noise models, we calculate plausible detection prospects for GW single sources and the stochastic GW background (GWB). Contrary to previous results, we find that single sources are at least as detectable as the GW background. Using mock PTA, we find that these 'foreground' sources (also 'deterministic'/'continuous') are likely to be detected with total observing baselines. Detection prospects, and indeed the…
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