Impact of the observation frequency coverage on the significance of a gravitational wave background detection in PTA data
Irene Ferranti, Mikel Falxa, Alberto Sesana, Aurelien Chalumeau,, Nataliya Porayko, Golam Shaifullah, Ismael Cognard, Lucas Guillemot, Michael, Kramer, Kuo Liu, Gilles Theureau

TL;DR
This study investigates how the frequency coverage in pulsar timing data affects the ability to detect and characterize gravitational wave backgrounds, highlighting the importance of multi-frequency observations for reducing noise degeneracies.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that improved frequency coverage enhances GWB detection significance and parameter estimation, and introduces a metric to quantify degeneracies between noise and signal.
Findings
Better frequency coverage increases detection significance (~1.3dex)
Degeneracy metric correlates with GWB detection loss
Homogeneous frequency coverage improves GWB characterization
Abstract
Pulsar Timing Array (PTA) collaborations gather high-precision timing measurements of pulsars with the aim of detecting gravitational wave (GW) signals. A major challenge lies in the identification and characterization of the different sources of noise that may hamper their sensitivity to GWs. The presence of time-correlated noise that resembles the target signal might give rise to degeneracies that can directly impact the detection statistics. In this work, we focus on the covariance that exists between a "chromatic" dispersion measure (DM) noise and an "achromatic" stochastic gravitational wave background (GWB). "Chromatic" associated to the DM noise means that its amplitude depends on the frequency of the incoming pulsar photons measured by the radio-telescope. Several frequency channels are then required to accurately characterise its chromatic features and when the coverage of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
