A search for planetary companions around 800 pulsars from the Jodrell Bank pulsar timing programme
Iuliana C. Ni\c{t}u, Michael J. Keith, Ben W. Stappers, Andrew G., Lyne, Mitchell B. Mickaliger

TL;DR
This study surveyed 800 pulsars for planetary companions using Bayesian analysis, setting strict mass limits and finding that very few pulsars could host Earth-sized planets, with most periodic signals likely caused by magnetospheric effects.
Contribution
First comprehensive search for planetary companions around 800 pulsars using Bayesian modeling and noise analysis, establishing new mass detection limits and clarifying the nature of periodic signals.
Findings
Fewer than 0.5% of pulsars could host Earth-mass planets.
Most periodicities are due to magnetospheric effects, not planets.
Detected signals are often attributable to intrinsic pulsar noise.
Abstract
We have searched for planetary companions around 800 pulsars monitored at the Jodrell Bank Observatory, with both circular and eccentric orbits of periods between days and years and inclination-dependent planetary masses from to . Using a Bayesian framework, we simultaneously model pulsar timing parameters and a stationary noise process with a power-law power spectral density. We put limits on the projected masses of any planetary companions, which reach as low as 1/100th of the mass of the Moon (). We find that two-thirds of our pulsars are highly unlikely to host any companions above . Our results imply that fewer than of pulsars could host terrestrial planets as large as those known to orbit PSR B125712 (); however, the smaller planet in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
