Narrowband searches for continuous gravitational waves from known pulsars in the first two parts of the fourth LIGO--Virgo--KAGRA observing run
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration, the Virgo Collaboration, and the KAGRA Collaboration: A. G. Abac, I. Abouelfettouh, F. Acernese, K. Ackley, A. Adam, C. Adamcewicz, S. Adhicary, D. Adhikari, N. Adhikari, R. X. Adhikari, V. K. Adkins, S. Afroz, A. Agapito, D. Agarwal

TL;DR
This paper reports a comprehensive narrowband search for continuous gravitational waves from 34 known pulsars using LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA data, setting upper limits on gravitational wave emission and exploring new parameter spaces.
Contribution
It introduces an expanded search including second frequency derivatives and binary systems, and applies the largest targeted narrowband search in the advanced detector era.
Findings
No evidence for continuous gravitational waves was found.
Upper limits on strain amplitude were set, with some below the spin-down limit.
The tightest upper limit is less than 2% of the Crab pulsar's spin-down limit.
Abstract
Rotating non-axisymmetric neutron stars (NSs) are promising sources for continuous gravitational waves (CWs). Such CWs can, if detected, inform us about the internal structure and equation of state of NSs. Here, we present a narrowband search for CWs from known pulsars, for which an efficient and sensitive matched-filter search can be applied. Narrowband searches are designed to be robust to mismatches between the electromagnetic (EM) and gravitational emissions, in contrast to fully targeted searches where the CW emission is assumed to be phase-locked to the EM one. In this work, we search for the CW counterparts emitted by 34 pulsars using data from the first and second parts of the fourth LIGO--Virgo--KAGRA observing run. This is the largest number of pulsars so far targeted for narrowband searches in the advanced detector era. We use the 5n-vector narrowband pipeline, which applies…
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