The NANOGrav 12.5-Year Data Set: The Frequency Dependence of Pulse Jitter in Precision Millisecond Pulsars
M. T. Lam, M. A. McLaughlin, Z. Arzoumanian, H. Blumer, P. R. Brook,, H. T. Cromartie, P. B. Demorest, M. E. DeCesar, T. Dolch, J. A. Ellis, R. D., Ferdman, E. C. Ferrara, E. Fonseca, N. Garver-Daniels, P. A. Gentile, M. L., Jones, D. R. Lorimer, R. S. Lynch, C. Ng, D. J. Nice

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the frequency dependence of pulse jitter in 48 millisecond pulsars, revealing significant jitter in most and its implications for gravitational-wave detection precision.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive characterization of jitter frequency dependence across a large pulsar sample, informing noise modeling in pulsar timing arrays.
Findings
Significant jitter detected in 43 of 48 pulsars.
Average jitter frequency dependence index of -0.42.
Moderate correlation between jitter and pulse width/number of components.
Abstract
Low-frequency gravitational-wave experiments require the highest timing precision from an array of the most stable millisecond pulsars. Several known sources of noise on short timescales in single radio-pulsar observations are well described by a simple model of three components: template-fitting from a finite signal-to-noise ratio, pulse phase/amplitude jitter from single-pulse stochasticity, and scintillation errors from short-timescale interstellar scattering variations. Currently template-fitting errors dominate, but as radio telescopes push towards higher signal-to-noise ratios, jitter becomes the next dominant term for most millisecond pulsars. Understanding the statistics of jitter becomes crucial for properly characterizing arrival-time uncertainties. We characterize the radio-frequency dependence of jitter using data on 48 pulsars in the North American Nanohertz Observatory for…
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